Editorial: Listen to Marjory Stoneman Douglas students demanding change
The kids are alright!
Editorial:
Listen to Marjory Stoneman Douglas students demanding change
Tampa Bay Times, 2/19/18
Students from Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School are traveling to the state capital today and declaring "never again. A prominent Florida Republican fundraiser vows he wont raise another nickel until his party approves new gun controls. Across Florida and the nation, the rising voices demanding change following last weeks massacre renew hope that this tragedy may finally break the pro-gun fever gripping Washington and Tallahassee.
The politicians have failed to act following previous mass shootings. An assault weapons ban and universal background checks on gun purchases died in the U.S. Senate following the 2012 Sandy Hook Elementary shooting in Connecticut, and all seemed hopeless if the innocent faces of those lost first-graders would not move Congress. Similar cries for change were ignored after 49 were killed in 2016 at the Pulse nightclub in Orlando and 58 were killed in 2017 at the Las Vegas country music concert. Higher death tolls proved to be no greater motivation for lawmakers owned by the National Rifle Association.
At the moment, this feels different. The shooting rampage that killed 17 on Valentines Day occurred at a well-regarded high school in an affluent Fort Lauderdale suburb with a strong sense of community. It affected high school students coming of age in the digital era, fully capable of handling television interviews, galvanizing support on social media and organizing trips to Tallahassee and Washington. They arent from a rural area that soon will be forgotten by the national media. They arent spread out around the country like the music fans who attended the Las Vegas concert. They have grown up with mass school shootings, and if they stick to a clear message they can be the critical voice for change as they honor their fallen friends with their advocacy.
This feels different, because the teens are getting support at the opposite end of the spectrum of age and power. Al Hoffman Jr., an influential North Palm Beach Republican fundraiser for decades, wrote an e-mail to Gov. Rick Scott, former Gov. Jeb Bush and a handful of other Republican leaders declaring he will not write another check until a ban on assault weapons is approved. Peter Rummell, another key Republican fundraiser from Jacksonville, agrees and Hoffman will encourage others to do the same. Republican lawmakers who wont be swayed by emotion or facts understand money.
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