The Ash Wednesday massacre at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School in Parkland, Florida, seems to have broken more hearts than similar tragedies that preceded it. It was no more senseless than other American school shootings, but there is something about the innocence and bravery and eloquence of the youthful survivors that has touched the souls of Americans deeply.
After burying their dead, the survivors have mobilized into a mighty political force that loosely seeks more laws to regulate the right to keep and bear arms. The young people, traumatized and terrified with memories of unspeakable horror that will not fade, somehow think that a person bent on murder will obey gun laws.
Every time I watch these beautiful young people, I wince, because in their understandable sadness is the potential for madness — “madness” being defined as the passionate and stubborn refusal to accept reason. This often happens after tragedy. After watching the government railroad Abraham Lincoln’s killer’s conspirators — and even some folks who had nothing to do with the assassination — the poet Herman Melville wrote: “Beware the People weeping. When they bare the iron hand.”
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2 comments:
To a Democrat:
A safe space makes legal speech illegal (because it's your speech)
A safe zone makes right to self preservation illegal (because it's your guns)
A safe use area makes illegal drugs legal (because it's their friends)
Enjoy the rest of your weekend 😁
Wake up people. The survivors we're used politically. It was well organized. Soros and Obama (who is a professional organizer) started these actions. The media jumped in and made sure of it. They wanted to bring up the second amendment again. They are users of innocent children. Shame on the likes of them
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