Since the mass shooting on Valentine’s Day at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School, in Parkland, Florida, in which a former student of the school killed seventeen students and staff with a legally acquired semiautomatic rifle, several of the survivors have become veteran public speakers. At the March for Our Lives, on Saturday, in Washington, D.C., speaking before thousands of people from a stage that framed the outline of the Capitol, they delivered remarks at least as articulate as those generally heard on the Hill. David Hogg gestured with disdain as he called on his fellow first-time voters to turn out for the midterms in 2018, and told lawmakers who were funded by the N.R.A. to “get your résumés ready.” In a moment of unscripted eloquence, Samantha Fuentes, a senior who was wounded in the attack, was so overcome with emotion—“Lawmakers and politicians will scream, ‘Guns are not the issue,’ but can’t look me in the eye,” she said—that she broke off and vomited behind the lectern. The Stoneman Douglas students shared the stage with several other impressive young people, including Naomi Wadler, a fifth grader who had previously organized a walkout at her elementary school, in Alexandria, and who spoke in honor of young black women whose lives have been taken by gun violence without making headlines; and Yolanda Renee King, the nine-year-old granddaughter of Martin Luther King, Jr., who gleefully led the crowd in a chant, “We are going to be a great generation.”
newyorker.com