santa fe high school

@HCSOTexas/Twitter

Parkland survivors condemn Trump’s response to Texas school shooting

Stop 'treating it like a sports game,' the March for Our Lives founder said.

 

Tess Cagle

Layer 8

Posted on May 18, 2018   Updated on May 21, 2021, 3:27 pm CDT

Gun control and gun rights advocates around the U.S. have begun to respond to reports of multiple fatalities following a shooting at Santa Fe High School in Texas.

Featured Video Hide

This is the 22nd school shooting in the U.S. just 20 weeks into the year, as CNN pointed out Friday morning.

Advertisement Hide

President Donald Trump tweeted about the shooting shortly after news reports rolled in.

School shooting in Texas,” he said. “Early reports not looking good. God bless all!”

Republican Rep. Randy Weber, who represents the district where the shooting took place, tweeted that he was praying for the situation.

Advertisement Hide

Vice President Mike Pence and First Lady Melania Trump also made statements of support with Santa Fe High School.

“To the students, families, teachers of Santa Fe High School, all of those affected and the entire community: We are with you, you are in our prayers, and you’re in the prayers of the American people,” he tweeted.

Advertisement Hide

For many, including student survivors from Parkland High School, politicians’ tweets were not enough. They were also outraged that another school, and countless students and families, have to go through what they did because no major strides in gun control have been made since the Feb. 14 shooting.

“Donald Trump does not care about school shootings,” Cameron Kasky, founder of March for Our Lives, tweeted. “Donald Trump does nothing to stop school shootings. Don’t talk to me about the ‘stop school violence act,’ because that does nothing to stop school shootings. Donald Trump does not care about you or your kids getting shot.”

Advertisement Hide

https://twitter.com/cameron_kasky/status/997496344024633346

https://twitter.com/cameron_kasky/status/997498409723531264

https://twitter.com/cameron_kasky/status/997499597592424448

“This has been my fear since February 14th, that another mass casualty shooting would happen before we did anything,” Fred Guttenberg, father of Jaime Guttenberg, who was killed in the Parkland shooting, tweeted. “Now, we have 8 more children dead and our leadership in Washington has done nothing. We do not need thoughts and prayers, we need action and we need it now.”

Advertisement Hide

Parkland survivor David Hogg tweeted shortly after the news of the shooting, “We are fighting for you.” He also tweeted that folks should get ready for “two weeks of media coverage of politicians acting like they give a shit when in reality they just want to boost their approval ratings before midterms.”

Advertisement Hide

Emma Gonzalez also tweeted about the shooting and said the school did not deserve the havoc it experienced Friday morning.

“Santa Fe High, you didn’t deserve this. You deserve peace all your lives, not just after a tombstone saying that is put over you,” she tweeted. “You deserve more than Thoughts and Prayers, and after supporting us by walking out we will be there to support you by raising up your voices.”

https://twitter.com/Emma4Change/status/997505205771079680

Advertisement Hide

Other Parkland students also tweeted about the shooting and called for change.

https://twitter.com/evilemilie/status/997491450379165698

Advertisement Hide

https://twitter.com/sofiewhitney/status/997503513805680641

Advertisement Hide

Brandon Wolf, a survivor of the Pulse nightclub shooting in Orlando, Florida, tweeted about the shooting, as well.

“Eating breakfast, going to the movies, out dancing, sitting in church, going to school,” he tweeted. “All offenses punishable by gun death in America. Where the hell are our leaders?”

Advertisement Hide

Eight people are confirmed dead at Santa Fe High School, with at least three injured being treated at local hospitals, according to CNN. The shooting occurred at 7:45am local time, and according to some witnesses began in an art class. The shooter was reportedly armed with a shotgun and likely a student at the high school, law enforcement officials said.

Share this article
*First Published: May 18, 2018, 11:43 am CDT
 
Exit mobile version