Parkland Survivors Push House Leaders on Gun Control Days After Texas School Shooting | Sojourners

Parkland Survivors Push House Leaders on Gun Control Days After Texas School Shooting

Students from high schools across the country appealed to lawmakers during a forum on gun violence prevention on Capitol Hill. Photo by Elizabeth Beyer

Students from high schools across the country met with Democratic members of Congress Wednesday to discuss gun control reform just days after another shooting claimed the lives of 10 and injured more than a dozen at Santa Fe High School in Texas.

Daniel Gelillo, who organized his Rockville, Md., high school’s walk-out during the March for Our Lives DC event in earlier in the Spring, said his fellow students have “flooded” the voicemail of House Speaker Paul Ryan (R-Wis.) with messages to “allow the vote” on legislation that would restrict some gun sales.

Ryan “controls the voting agenda and he won’t put any of this stuff on the floor,” Gelillo told lawmakers. “I think that is murder, basically. He’s allowing children in this country to be gunned down in their classrooms because he will not take legislative action.”

Currently, 26 measures pending in Congress include gun-control measures either sponsored or co-sponsored by Democrats, according to Rep. Alcee Hastings (D-Fla.), who called such restrictions “reasonable.”

“There are just too many damn guns in America,” declared Rep. Frederica Wilson (D-Fla.). She suggested a ban on assault weapons, the addition of more counselors in school districts, social workers for home visits to check on troubled children, and more mentoring programs to intervene in the lives of children who might be tempted to join gangs as possible solutions.

Charlie Mirsky, a student at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School, where 17 students died during a school shooting in February, also attended the Capitol Hill event.

“Still nothing’s happened on the national scale. In the past 24 years it’s only gotten worse,” Mirsky said. “Clearly, it’s not being prioritized.”

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Charlie Mirsky, a student at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School where 17 students died during a school shooting in February, at the Capitol Hill event. Photo by Elizabeth Beyer

Representatives at the forum repeatedly told the student panel to hold Congress accountable and to vote for members in the upcoming midterm elections who will enact the change they seek.

The setting of the forum — the Gabriel Zimmerman Room of the U.S. Capitol Visitor Center — was fitting, as the room is named after a staffer of then-Rep. Gabrielle Giffords (D-Ariz.), who was killed as he attempted to disarm the gunman who shot the congresswoman in 2011.

But advocates have a hill to climb given the perceived muscle of the National Rifle Association and in how different cultures view gun rights.

Wesley Hill, a senior at Santa Fe High School, told Vice News that the first person to contact him after he appeared on the news following the shooting was a member of March for Our Lives Houston. He said they were reaching out to the wrong people.

“This is Santa Fe. This isn’t a city, this is a small town, country town. I said, ‘You’re not going to take our guns away,’” Hill said in the documentary.

Texas, an open carry state where the National Rifle Association held its 2018 convention earlier this month, has some of the most lenient gun laws in the country. Of the state’s 34 members of Congress, 25 have an A- or higher rating from the gun advocacy group.

Incoming NRA president Oliver North said in a FOX News interview last week that the rise in school shootings in the U.S. can be blamed on Ritalin, a medication prescribed for ADHD and on a culture of violence.

"The disease in this case isn't the Second Amendment. The disease is youngsters who are steeped in a culture of violence. They have been drugged in many cases," North said during an interview with FOX News on Sunday.

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