TIME Magazineのインスタグラム(time) - 3月23日 10時10分


Gun violence in America is one of those problems that can feel truly hopeless. But in the days after the Feb. 14 shooting at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School in #Parkland, Fla., something different happened. The Parkland kids, at once tearful and cutting, publicly called out the NRA’s influence on national politics, and shamed the leaders they considered responsible for the nation’s lax gun laws. Emma González (@emmazelaznog) became a figurehead of the #NeverAgain movement after giving a series of impassioned speeches about gun reform. Their voices quickly went viral. González had no Twitter account before the shooting—11 days later, she had more followers than the NRA. They called for specific changes like a renewed assault-weapons ban, universal background checks and digitized gun-ownership records. The #NeverAgain organizers built a movement with the skills they learned in high school. González is on the debate team, and her viral speech about the NRA’s influence was informed by an AP Government lesson on special interest groups. Still, the kids face the same question as the movements before them: If this government doesn’t respond to their demands, did their movement make a difference? Read the full story on TIME.com (link in bio). Photograph by Gabriella Demczuk (@gdemczuk) for TIME


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