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Re: BullNBear52 post# 23978

Monday, 02/19/2018 12:17:52 PM

Monday, February 19, 2018 12:17:52 PM

Post# of 48180
After Florida, I had lost hope. Then I saw Emma González

Suzanne Moore @suzanne_moore Mon 19 Feb 2018 11.11 EST
https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/commentisfree/2018/feb/19/after-florida-i-had-lost-hope-then-i-saw-emma-gonzalez

In a speech on Saturday, the high school student wiped back tears and demanded that US gun laws must change. These kids are fighting for their lives

It’s Presidents’ Day today. Why not celebrate with a discount on bump stocks? Their manufacturer, Slide Fire, has a special offer on. You don’t know what a bump stock is? What kind of loser are you? It’s the device by which you can make a semi-automatic rifle function as a fully automatic one. Your own machine gun! You just keep your finger on the trigger and can fire between 400 and 800 rounds a minute. The discount code, by the way, is Maga: Make America Great Again.

Bump stocks were found on the Las Vegas shooter’s guns. Of course they were. If you want to kill as many people possible in a short time, they are your friend. Useful for a school shooting.

I barely registered the latest act of terror in the US. Yes, it is terror. Alienated young men; “lone wolves”; individual terrorist cells motivated by racism, misogyny, self-loathing, complete alienation, radicalised by footage of every other mass shooting. Dress it up how you like, but this terrorism has infected US society at every level. When small children are taught what to do when the inevitable “mentally disturbed” man arrives – throw things, hide in cupboards, play dead while their murdered friends’ blood pours on to them – then terror has achieved its aims. Fear. Fear becomes woven into everyday routine in an effort to domesticate it.

The narrative plays out. The aerial footage, the desperate parents, the running children, heroic teachers who throws themselves in front of the pupils. This time Scott Beigel who, when watching coverage of a different school shooting on TV, told his fiancee, Gwen: “Promise me if this ever happens to me, you will tell them the truth – tell them what a jerk I am. Don’t talk about the hero stuff.” He died at Marjory Stoneman Douglas high school trying to protect the kids from the gunman.

The gunman. No names here. Let us not give these men the notoriety they lust for. Another boy, who tortured animals, was violent to women and expressed his desire to kill on online forums; pretty much the CV of every terrorist. Beating up women is, as we know, another way of terrorising people, one that is shrugged off as domestic as opposed to societal violence.

On and on it goes and Donald Trump – who used murdered children to try to take the heat off the investigation into his campaign’s Russian links – spaffs on about thoughts and prayers. The same phrase used after Sandy Hook – when we who love the US feared for its mortal soul.

But then I started watching. I saw a girl with a buzzcut, Emma González, wiping back the tears, publicly mourning her dead classmates and demanding change. I watched the footage from inside the classrooms that students had captured on their phones. I heard the screams of those about to die. I glimpsed a floral cotton dress, a flimsy desk and realised that these children are taking control of the narrative now.

And refusing it. González is in trauma, but she is organising. She and many of her classmates are directly challenging the donations of the National Rifle Association to Trump and his cronies, and his decision to scrap a regulation that kept guns out of the hands of people with severe mental illnesses.

There will be school strikes. There is resistance. These young people will not sit in classrooms any more waiting for their turn to come. They are not going to be another statistic. “We are going to be the kids you read about in textbooks,” said a weeping González. Plans have been announced for a March for Our Lives on 24 March.

As she wiped away tears, for the first time in a long time, I saw true leadership on this issue. These kids are fighting for their lives. I thought everything was broken. This girl gives me hope.


https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/commentisfree/2018/feb/19/after-florida-i-had-lost-hope-then-i-saw-emma-gonzalez

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