"The adults know that we’re cleaning up their mess," says @cameronkasky, an 11th-grader at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School, who started the #NeverAgain movement to curb gun violence three weeks earlier in his living room. Kasky and his peers did so one day after authorities said a former student opened fire at the school in #Parkland, Fla., and killed 17 people before being taken into custody. Most of these kids cannot vote, order a beer, make a hotel reservation or afford a pizza without pooling some of their allowance. On the surface, they’re not so different from previous generations of idealistic teenagers who set out to change the world, only to find it is not so easy. Yet over the past month, these students have become the central organizers of what may turn out to be the most powerful grassroots gun-reform movement in nearly two decades. For much of the rest of the country, numbed and depressed by repeated mass shootings, the question has become, Can these kids actually do it? The first big test will come on March 24 with the student-led March for Our Lives, which already has registered hundreds of demonstrations in all 50 states and on six continents. The march is meant to expand voter registration among like-minded members of the school-shooting generation: the kids that grew up post-Columbine, who huddled behind barricades during active-shooter drills and learned to tape construction paper over classroom windows. From there, the Parkland kids plan to make gun reform the central issue for young voters in the midterms. “The world failed us,” Kasky says, “and we’re here to make a new one that’s going to be easier on the next generation. If you’re against that, then get out.” Read the full story on TIME.com (link in bio). Photograph by Gabriella Demczuk (@gdemczuk) for TIME

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"The adults know that we’re cleaning up their mess," says @cameronkasky, an 11th-grader at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School, who started the #NeverAgain movement to curb gun violence three weeks earlier in his living room. Kasky and his peers did so one day after authorities said a former student opened fire at the school in #Parkland, Fla., and killed 17 people before being taken into custody. Most of these kids cannot vote, order a beer, make a hotel reservation or afford a pizza without pooling some of their allowance. On the surface, they’re not so different from previous generations of idealistic teenagers who set out to change the world, only to find it is not so easy. Yet over the past month, these students have become the central organizers of what may turn out to be the most powerful grassroots gun-reform movement in nearly two decades. For much of the rest of the country, numbed and depressed by repeated mass shootings, the question has become, Can these kids actually do it? The first big test will come on March 24 with the student-led March for Our Lives, which already has registered hundreds of demonstrations in all 50 states and on six continents. The march is meant to expand voter registration among like-minded members of the school-shooting generation: the kids that grew up post-Columbine, who huddled behind barricades during active-shooter drills and learned to tape construction paper over classroom windows. From there, the Parkland kids plan to make gun reform the central issue for young voters in the midterms. “The world failed us,” Kasky says, “and we’re here to make a new one that’s going to be easier on the next generation. If you’re against that, then get out.” Read the full story on TIME.com (link in bio). Photograph by Gabriella Demczuk (@gdemczuk) for TIME


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