I would like to express my gratitude to Sen. Marco Rubio, R-Fla., for attending the CNN town hall and listening to other survivors from the Marjory Stoneman Douglas massacre. I respect him for that brave action.
Due to yet another horrifying incident, I feel compelled to make sure our gun laws change, and the more I hear that an assault rifle ban is not likely to pass, the more worried I get about the future of my country.
As I drove into my school for the first day of classes on Feb. 28, tears rolled down my face. First, because I remembered the last time I was in school, and then because my school was surrounded by armed officers. I felt as if I were watching a movie depicting the arrival at a prison. When I stepped out of my car, it became my reality, and it slowly sunk in that I was entering my school.
My parents actually moved from Canada to Littleton, Colo., in 1998. They lived there during the Columbine High School shooting a year later, and when I was born, they decided that they did not want me to eventually attend a school where a massacre occurred, but now, in my senior year, my own school has been partly transformed into a crime scene and a military zone.
Source:
usatoday
No comments:
Post a Comment