U.S. students turn to gun-control group
after school shooting
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[February 22, 2018]
By Barbara Goldberg
NEW YORK (Reuters) - When they got prayers
and thoughts from U.S. lawmakers after a massacre at a Florida high
school that left 17 students and teachers dead, thousands of young
people turned to the country's largest gun-control advocacy group to
learn how to make their voices heard.
Students flooded Everytown for Gun Safety with calls after last week's
Florida school massacre, prompting the creation of its first student
branch, the group said on Wednesday.
"We can do social media like no one else," said Sophie Herrmann, 18, a
senior seeking to start a Students Demand Action group at Benilde-St.
Margaret's, a Catholic high school in St. Louis Park, Minnesota. "We are
ready to take on the fight."
On Feb. 14, a gunman killed 17 people at a Parkland, Florida high
school, the latest in a long series of deadly U.S. school shootings,
stirring the nation's long-running debate about gun rights and public
safety.
Survivors of the shooting at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School in
Parkland, Florida, have emerged as the new faces of the gun-control
movement and marched on the state capital of Tallahassee on Wednesday to
call for a ban on assault-style weapons.
The youth-led protest movement has rallied around the #NeverAgain
slogan, attracted prominent celebrity supporters and plans a rally in
Washington on March 24.
They are a generation born into a world where schools routinely practice
active shooter drills by having students lock the classroom door and
hide out of sight to try to prevent another massacre like the 1999
shooting in Columbine, Colorado that killed 13 or the massacre in 2012
in Newtown, Connecticut that left 26 dead.
The new "Students Demand Action" branch is expected to try to lift a ban
on government research into gun violence, get out the notoriously absent
youth vote and even run for elected office themselves.
Students Demand Action is set to hold its first-ever nationwide
organizing call on Wednesday evening, and participants anticipate the
high school and college student groups will take a different tact from
their elders to stop gun violence.
Students will likely push to restore federal funding for scientific
studies of firearms-injury prevention, which has been choked off since
1996 by the so-called Dickey Amendment.
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People hold signs while marching with the Moms Demand Action for Gun
Sense in America contingent at the San Francisco LGBT Pride Parade
in San Francisco, California, U.S. June 26, 2016. REUTERS/Elijah
Nouvelage/File Photo
It was sponsored by Jay Dickey, an Arkansas Republican who described
himself as the National Rifle Association’s “point person in
Congress," after government researchers reported that people who
kept guns in their homes faced a nearly three-fold greater risk of
homicide and a nearly five-fold greater risk of suicide.
(http://reut.rs/2sLHKC8)
Millennials are far less likely than Baby Boomers to vote in
mid-term elections in November, so another expected focus of the
student group will be getting young voters to the polls, said
Shannon Watts, founder of Moms Demand Action, part of Everytown, a 4
million member organization funded by billionaire businessman and
former New York Mayor Michael Bloomberg.
"Not only getting out the vote but registering new voters. Something
like 4 million Americans will turn 18 before mid-term elections,"
Watts said. "They are chomping at the bit to vote on this issue."
And, if no candidate emerges to challenge an incumbent beholden to
the National Rifle Association, members of Students Demand Action
will likely be trained by Everytown to run for elected office
themselves, both Watts and Herrmann said.
"We are ready. If Congress isn’t going to fight for common sense gun
remedies, then let us take those spots," Herrmann said.
(Reporting by Barbara Goldberg; Editing by Lisa Shumaker)
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