Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School survivors speak to MCPS students at Blair High School
Former and current Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School students spoke to about 650 Montgomery County students at Montgomery Blair High School. They talked about the issue of gun control.
Stoneman Douglas experienced a mass shooting on February 14, in which 17 student and staff lives were taken. Survivors and former students have been going to different states to meet with legislative representatives to make their voices heard and demand change.
Stoneman Douglas students were welcomed with a standing ovation from the crowd. No media reporters or parents were allowed inside the auditorium, it was strictly a student event. The event was scheduled to end at 9 pm but ran 15 minutes over to allow for the eager MCPS students to ask more questions.
“It’s unbelievable. I can’t even fathom that our support and movement has reach all over the country,” Stoneman Douglas senior Sofie Whitney said. “There’s hundreds of kids just listening to us speak, we’re just like normal kids and this is crazy.”
Maryland 8th district Representative Jamie Raskin and Florida 21st district Representative Ted Deutch organized the meeting at Blair on Monday, February 26. MCPS students expressed their solidarity and were able to ask questions to Stoneman Douglas students. Deutch expressed that change must happen right now. “This is the generation that insist upon change,” Deutch said.
“Watching them on stage, you hear how eloquently they’re speaking and how educated they are. It’s empowering,” senior Catherine Hodge said. “Getting to meet them off stage and hugging them, you realized they’re your peers. It really brings home that idea that the situation could have happened anywhere.”
Various MCPS student representatives got the chance to sit on stage with Stoneman Douglas students and Deutch to explain the actions taking place around the county in support of changing gun control laws. On March 14 at 10 am thousands of students plan to walk out for 17 minutes to honor the 17 victims who died. Many also plan to attend the nationwide march on March 24.
On Monday afternoon, just hours before the event, President Donald Trump said, “I believe I’d run in [to Stoneman Douglas], even if I didn’t have a weapon,” referring to the inaction of the armed police officer at the school. Stoneman Douglas senior Ryan Deitsch replied to Trump’s comment, saying, “Let me just say, there was an armed deputy at our school who did not go in, so I would like to see Donald Trump haul himself.”
Overall, the main point of the discussion was to get students aware of actions they can take to put pressure on the government, that students lives matter, and that we’re the generation that will bring change to gun control policies.
Your donation will support the student journalists of Watkins Mill High School. Your contribution will allow us to purchase equipment and cover our annual website hosting costs.
Nana Osei Tutu is a Senior at Watkins Mill and is one of the Co-Editor In Chiefs of The Current. She is involved in many programs at the mill as well ...
Jessica Cruz is a senior at Watkins Mill High school and is one of the Editors in Chief of the Current. Jessica has been playing softball and running track...
John Jiler • Nov 6, 2018 at 11:31 am
THE NOTORIOUS NINETEEN
Dear Editor;
Autumn is deepening, and seniors are seriously thinking about their next step. For many of us, your generation is the hope of the future. The Parkland high school shootings galvanized young people across the nation to passionately advocate for common sense gun laws. Now, as your attention turns to college, we want to turn our admiration into action.
With the help of the Brady Center, the new Gabby Giffords consortium, Everytown for Gun Safety and the Columbia Scholastic Press Association, we’re reaching out to high school journalists across the country with our list of the NOTORIOUS NINETEEN—the states with dangerous, inadequate gun laws. Many of them condone the open carry of weapons on college campuses, but even those who don’t have encouraged or tolerated a state-wide, lawless violent culture. Our mission is to make these states known to high school seniors, whom we encourage NOT to apply to college in:
ALABAMA, ALASKA, ARIZONA, ARKANSAS, FLORIDA, GEORGIA, IDAHO, KANSAS, KENTUCKY, MISSISSIPPI, MISSOURI, MONTANA, NEW HAMPSHIRE, NORTH DAKOTA, OKLAHOMA, TEXAS, UTAH, WEST VIRGINIA, or WYOMING.
We’ll be following up with letters to college presidents, Governors and legislators of the “Notorious Nineteen.” If they’re curious why their state-wide college applications are down this year, we’ll be happy to tell them!
Thank you for considering the publication of this letter in your newspaper. This is how the world changes. Good luck throughout senior year…… and beyond!
Best,
John Jiler,
Coordinator,
Committee for Scholastic Action On Guns
Claudia Tinoco • Feb 28, 2018 at 3:30 pm
I commend you for your courage to stand up against guns. I don’t believe in guns, and I would not like to carry a gun anywhere. I haven’t needed a gun all my life. Guns are for wars and not for anyone else to carry. I don’t believe guns in schools is the solution. The solution is to stop bullying in schools, stop the hate, stop the madness, use all the resources to get people help so they don’t use guns to kill themselves or others. Use the money being used to make guns, to be used to help unite families, society, and and help people who have mental illnesses. Instead of expelling someone, refer them to a place where they can get intensive help.