'ENOUGH': U.S. student walkout sends
message on gun violence
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[March 15, 2018]
By Bernie Woodall
PARKLAND, Fla. (Reuters) - U.S. students
spilled out of classrooms by the tens of thousands on Wednesday,
chanting slogans like "No more silence" and "We want change" as part of
a coast-to-coast protest over gun violence prompted by last month's
massacre at a Florida high school.
The #ENOUGH National School Walkout was intended to pressure federal and
state lawmakers to tighten laws on gun ownership despite opposition by
the National Rifle Association (NRA), the powerful gun rights advocacy
group.
With some students dressed in orange, the color adopted by the gun
control movement, the walkouts began at 10 a.m. local time in each time
zone and were scheduled to last 17 minutes. Many rallies went longer.
The duration was a tribute to 17 students and staff killed at Marjory
Stoneman Douglas High School in Parkland, Florida, on Feb. 14. It was
the latest in a series of shootings that have plagued U.S. schools and
colleges over the past two decades.
While many school districts gave their blessings to the walkouts, others
said anyone who participated would face discipline. Many students defied
the warnings and left school anyway. They included over two dozen at
Lindenhurst High School on New York state's Long Island, who were at
first suspended, then had their punishment reduced to detentions,
according to a senior and the school superintendent.
In Parkland, thousands of students slowly filed onto the Stoneman
Douglas school football field to the applause of families and supporters
beyond the fences as law enforcement officers looked on. News
helicopters hovered overhead.
Ty Thompson, the principal, called for the "biggest group hug," and the
students obliged around the 50-yard line.
"We want change!" students chanted on the sidewalks outside the school.
"Can you hear the children screaming?" read one of the signs.
But not all students in Florida were in favor of gun control. About 80
miles (129 km) north of Parkland at Vero Beach High School, chants of
"No More Silence, end gun violence," were countered by shouts of
“Trump!” and “We want guns” from other students, according to video
posted by local newspaper TCPalm.
At New York City's Fiorello H. LaGuardia High School, crowds of students
poured into the streets of Manhattan, many dressed in orange, symbolic
of the bright color worn by hunters to avoid being shot by accident.
"Thoughts and prayers are not enough," read one sign at LaGuardia, a jab
at a response often uttered by lawmakers after mass shootings.
In Akron, Ohio, hundreds of students wearing orange t-shirts with black
targets on the front walked out of Firestone High School.
At Granada Hills Charter High School in Los Angeles, students laid prone
on the field of a football stadium to form a giant #ENOUGH, symbolizing
the thousands of youth who die of gun violence every year in the United
States.
Students at Columbine High, Colorado remembered the 1999 massacre at
their school that began an era in which mass shootings became common in
U.S. schools.
"I grew up in a community still haunted by the tragedy from 19 years
ago," said 16-year-old sophomore Abigail Orton.
LOBBYING LAWMAKERS
The walkouts were part of a burgeoning, grassroots movement prompted by
the Parkland attack and came 10 days before major protests planned in
Washington and elsewhere. Survivors have lobbied lawmakers and President
Donald Trump in a push for new restrictions on gun ownership, a right
protected by the U.S. Constitution's Second Amendment.
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Students from Washington, DC-area schools carry signs during a
protest for stricter gun control during a walkout by students at the
U.S. Capitol in Washington, U.S., March 14, 2018. REUTERS/Joshua
Roberts
"We don't feel safe in schools anymore," said Sarah Chatfield, a
high school student from Maryland, standing with hundreds of other
protesters outside the White House.
Chanting "Hey hey, ho ho, the NRA has got to go!" students, many of
whom will be able to vote in 2020, marched to the U.S. Capitol,
where Democratic lawmakers emerged from the white-domed landmark to
praise them.
The student-led initiative helped bring about a tightening of
Florida's gun laws last week, when the minimum age of 21 for buying
any handguns was extended to all firearms. But lawmakers rejected a
ban on the sort of semiautomatic rifle used in the Parkland attack.
In Washington, however, proposals to strengthen the background-check
system for gun sales, among other measures, appear to be
languishing.
After protests began on Wednesday, the NRA tweeted a picture of a
semiautomatic rifle with the caption "I'll control my own guns,
thank you."
SCHOOLS VARY IN RESPONSE
Students from more than 3,000 schools and groups joined the
walkouts, many with the backing of their school districts, according
to the event's organizers, who also coordinated the Women's March
protests staged nationwide over the past two years.
In Newtown, Pennsylvania, more than 100 students walked out of
Council Rock High School despite warnings they would face discipline
if they left the building.
But after the walkout, Superintendent Robert Fraser said “the level
of maturity and sincerity was amazing” among protesters, and the
school district waived any punishments.
At Norton High School in the rural-suburban district in northeastern
Ohio, a small group of students, including a teenage boy with an
American flag draped over his shoulder, stood apart from a larger
gathering of nearly 300 students who walked out of class. One of the
students also flew a large Trump flag at the end of his truck.
Ryan Shanor, the school's principal, said the small group wanted to
honor the victims but disagreed with sentiment they considered to be
against the Second Amendment.
“They did not agree with everything they thought the protest was
about,” he said.
(Additional reporting by Gina Cherelus, Jonathan Allen and Alice
Popovici in New York; Suzanne Barlyn in Newtown, Pennsylvania; Joe
Skipper in Parkland, Florida; Scott Malone in Boston; Kim Palmer in
Cleveland; Susan Heavey, Richard Cowan, Sarah N. Lynch and Ian
Simpson in Washington; Lindsey Wasson in Seattle; Keith Coffman in
Colorado; writing by Jonathan Allen and Andrew Hay; editing by Frank
McGurty and Jonathan Oatis)
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