We'll get that stuff anyway - no need to march for it. What we need is an AR ban and these morons think they'll get it bc they want it bc [gasp] KIDS. Sorry kids -- $$ and lobbying power talks and you don't have any and you won't even if you're 18 by Nov. |
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Equate missing days of school to go to an amusement park with missing less than an hour to participate in an historic protest?
Okay then. |
sophisticated reasoning not a strength for some of these posters . . . |
My alma mater in Wisconsin had 750 kids participate in a walkout. I believe total student body is around 1200. |
That's why we are ok going to Disney during the school year. That principal just sent a mixed message. So, now what. Kids will find something new to protest every week. They could have done it on the weekend just as well. The same kids are the same ones bullying other kids, ignoring them, being mean, etc. who lead kids to depression and desperate measures. Gun laws help but this is a parenting and school issue (with schools providing better mental health, checking in with students - when I was at a large high school I doubt anyone knew I existed as I was not a stand out student - I even skipped class not feeling well when I could not get my parents and no one cared or said anything). |
This isn't an historic protest. Seriously no one will care next year. And, the protest could have been done on Saturday. |
This is so much more than gun violence. This is about mental illness, drugs,parenting, home life, school life and more. If you ban legal guns, kids will just get them illegally just like they do drugs. |
There is deep symbolism to WALKING OUT of school to commemorate a mass shooting DONE AT SCHOOL. So no, it could not have been done on a weekend. I can't think of any other protest that high schoolers might want to do en masse with such a close link to school. Nothing that schools would excuse, anyway. |
+1 |
| I’m proud of them. And guess what, students in swing states do care about this. They walked out in MI, VA, PA, FL, etc. and I can’t wait for these kids to be able to vote. |
Barf at your post, pp. |
This is called deflection. Your trip to Disney has nothing whatsoever to do with this massive political action, which achieved exactly what it set out to achieve, in that there was a ton of news coverage all day. |
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In our MCPS middle school, students observed a moment of silence, read out the names of the victims, wrote letters to their congress reps/senators, and walked out 17 minutes before the school closed to assemble in the field in a peaceful and orderly fashion. They dispersed then when the school day ended to walk home or catch the bus. It was very powerful. I am so impressed how very quite and somber the mood was in the school, considering it is middle schooler.
I am a gun owner. I grew up hunting with a license. However, I have no issues with stricter gun control laws and I do not think that the right to bear arms is jeopardized with legislation that is sensible and safety oriented. Just like we do not allow people to drive cars without a license and a due process, we should not allow gun ownership without a thorough vetting of the owner and a strict licensing process. Unlike cars, guns are made to kill or deter by threat of death/injury. I want to see responsible and strict legislation so that a few bad apples are weeded out and it does not jeopardize my right to legally bear arms. There are many countries that have instituted such reforms and there is no reason we cannot be civilized and do the same. |
A walk out in support of safer schools. Compared to mouse ears. Is it any wonder these kids don't think their concerns are being heard? |
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I think the March in DC will show the strength in numbers these future voters have. Theynwill be voters by 2020 in huge numbers! We did not gomtomschool in world they have today. When elementary schools have shooter drills ( not called this in granddaughter's E'S by name), this is why the teens marching matters. I was in DC as a college student at GWU and remember quite well the marches of the late 1960 involving poverty, racism and the Vietnam War and public mobilization can matter. |