Parkland students who survived a mass shooting in February are turning their trauma into action. For the past 2 months, a busload of them have traveled the country in pursuit of stricter gun laws, connecting with local activists, holding rallies, debating counterprotesters and, above all, registering voters. They knew perfectly well how many before them — after Columbine, after Sandy Hook, after Orlando — had been unable to turn outrage into lasting change. They don’t “blame guns for everything.” At every stop, they emphasize that gun violence can’t be addressed without addressing what fuels it: racism, poverty, substandard schools and mental health services. They speak daily about intersectionality, systems of oppression, the school-to-prison pipeline. They urged young people to vote. Many of their proposals already have widespread support. It’s Congress and state legislatures, they say, that don’t reflect the will of the people. They talk about these things so much that it’s easy to forget they are, well, teenagers. People who hold an impromptu dance party outside a theater when one of them starts banging out the “Pirates of the Caribbean” theme on a bright green piano. People who talk about prom and mock each other’s pool shots and stuff cupcakes into their mouths whole. @ga.briella took this photo of @briaasmithh hugging @lauren.hoggg at the April 16 Memorial at Virginia Tech University in Blacksburg, Virginia. Visit the link in our profile to read more.

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ニューヨーク・タイムズのインスタグラム(nytimes) - 8月17日 05時53分


Parkland students who survived a mass shooting in February are turning their trauma into action. For the past 2 months, a busload of them have traveled the country in pursuit of stricter gun laws, connecting with local activists, holding rallies, debating counterprotesters and, above all, registering voters. They knew perfectly well how many before them — after Columbine, after Sandy Hook, after Orlando — had been unable to turn outrage into lasting change. They don’t “blame guns for everything.” At every stop, they emphasize that gun violence can’t be addressed without addressing what fuels it: racism, poverty, substandard schools and mental health services. They speak daily about intersectionality, systems of oppression, the school-to-prison pipeline. They urged young people to vote. Many of their proposals already have widespread support. It’s Congress and state legislatures, they say, that don’t reflect the will of the people. They talk about these things so much that it’s easy to forget they are, well, teenagers. People who hold an impromptu dance party outside a theater when one of them starts banging out the “Pirates of the Caribbean” theme on a bright green piano. People who talk about prom and mock each other’s pool shots and stuff cupcakes into their mouths whole. @ga.briella took this photo of @briaasmithh hugging @lauren.hoggg at the April 16 Memorial at Virginia Tech University in Blacksburg, Virginia. Visit the link in our profile to read more.


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