March For Our Lives live updates: Protesters take to the streets across US

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Tasos Katopodis/Getty Images

(WASHINGTON) — Americans advocating for gun reform are taking to the streets in communities across the U.S. Saturday to participate in protests sparked by the back-to-back mass shootings in Uvalde, Texas, and Buffalo, New York.

The nationwide marches were organized by March For Our Lives, a group founded by student survivors of the 2018 high school shooting in Parkland, Florida, that killed 17 people.

Saturday’s marches are in response to the May 24 shooting at a Uvalde elementary school that killed 19 students and two teachers, as well as the May 14 massacre at a Buffalo grocery store where 10 people, all of whom were Black, were gunned down in an alleged hate crime.

Jun 11, 3:54 pm
‘No one should be able to inflict these types of injuries’

At the March For Our Lives rally in Los Angeles, one woman held a sign reading: “Send the guns to Ukraine.”

Dr. Jeffrey Birnbaum, a pediatric emergency medicine doctor in LA and a Parkland, Florida, native, explained the severity of semi-automatic rifle injuries.

He recalled his first experience treating patients shot by semi-automatic rifles, saying “the images of their injuries will be forever burned into my mind.”

“I vividly remember thinking that no one should be able to inflict these types of injuries on a fellow human being,” Birnbaum told the crowd.

A survivor of the 2014 mass shooting at the University of California Santa Barbara also shared her experience at the LA rally. She said after the shooting, her mother begged her to drop out of college, terrified for her safety.

Last month’s Uvalde, Texas, shooting came one day after the anniversary of the UCSB massacre. She said she doesn’t want any other generation to endure this grief.

“I know that we are exhausted — but we must continue showing up … because I can’t take it anymore,” she said.

Jun 11, 3:01 pm
Buffalo community marches weeks after mass shooting

Buffalo, New York, residents held a March For Our Lives rally on Saturday, weeks after a mass shooting that killed 10 shook their community.

Another rally was in Parkland, Florida, home to the 2018 school shooting that killed 17.

Americans in cities across the nation, from New York to Chicago, also joined in, taking to the streets and making their voices heard.

Jun 11, 2:37 pm
A teacher’s perspective

“We need fewer guns in schools — not more of them!” Randi Weinstein, president of the American Federation of Teachers, said in a passionate speech in Washington, D.C.

“Teachers want to be teaching!” she said. “As we head back to school this fall, please arm us with resources — with books, with school counselors. Not with bulletproof vests.”

Weinstein also addressed critical race theory, noting, “If we have the judgment to shoot a bad guy, why don’t we have the judgment to plan our lessons?”

Jun 11, 2:08 pm
MLK’s granddaughter returns to stage

Yolanda King, a 14-year-old granddaughter of Martin Luther King Jr., returned to the Washington, D.C., March For Our Lives stage, four years after she addressed protesters at age 10.

“Like so many of you, I come from a thoughtful, prayerful family. My grandfather was taken from the world by gun violence,” the teen said.

King stressed that this movement “isn’t only about kids — it’s about all of us.”

“We’ve had enough of having more guns than people,” she said.

Jun 11, 2:06 pm
Crowd briefly disperses in false alarm

The Washington, D.C., crowd briefly dispersed in a false alarm incident.

Activist Fred Guttenberg, whose 14-year-old daughter Jaime was killed in Parkland, took the mic to calm the protesters, saying everyone was OK and “there is nothing to be concerned about.”

Speakers then resumed.

Jun 11, 1:48 pm
Congresswoman shares personal story surviving gun violence

Rep. Cori Bush, D-Mo., shared a personal story at the Washington, D.C., march, recounting when, as a young adult, she was in a relationship with an abusive partner who owned guns.

“He did not approve of the way I was cooking … we began arguing, he started to hit me. I decided to run out of the apartment,” Bush said. “As I ran, I remember thinking to myself, why isn’t he chasing me? … When I turned back for a moment … I heard shots. Shots fired. But I didn’t know if they were aimed at me. Until they started whizzing past my head.”

“That moment of horror, it stays with me,” Bush said.

“It’s so deeply traumatic and completely preventable,” Bush said, referencing the boyfriend loophole, red flag laws and universal background checks.

Bush said, “We will never give up our push to save lives.”

Jun 11, 1:26 pm
Parkland dad, survivor take the stage

Manuel Oliver, whose son, 17-year-old, Joaquin was killed in Parkland, said in Washington, D.C., “Our elected officials betrayed us and have avoided the responsibility to end gun violence.”

He said, “If lawmakers who have the power to keep us safe from gun violence are going to avoid taking action,” then he’s calling for a nationwide strike of schools, from elementary to college.

“Avoid attending school if your leaders fail … to keep us safe,” he said. “Avoid going back to school if President Biden fails to open a White House Office of Gun Violence Prevention so that we can finally give this issue the attention that it deserves.”

Oliver appeared on stage with David Hogg, a Parkland survivor and March For Our Lives co-founder, who vowed, “This time is different.”

“This is not a political issue — this is a moral issue,” Hogg said.

He suggested combatting gun violence the way the U.S. addressed cigarettes.

“With cigarettes, we didn’t just change the laws — we addressed why people want to smoke in the first place,” Hogg said. “We have to address how people get guns and why they feel the need to pick them up in the first place. We must address the fact that the reason why communities like Parkland don’t have shootings on a daily basis isn’t because we necessarily have the strongest laws … we have some of the most resources.”

Jun 11, 1:20 pm
NY AG joins Brooklyn march

New York Attorney General Letitia James joined a march in Brooklyn, tweeting, “We will fight every single day until we get the common-sense gun reforms this nation needs to end gun violence and save lives.”

Jun 11, 1:04 pm
DC mayor: Tell your senators ‘make change now– or get out of our way’

Washington, D.C., Mayor Muriel Bowser told protesters she’s frustrated because “we have been here before.”

“We’re not asking for a lot. We’re asking to drop off our children at school without having to worry that someone will bring an AR-15 into their classroom. We are asking to go to the grocery store without worrying that someone will be shot dead by a gunman who is filled with hate. We are asking to let our children go to the playground without worrying that a car will drive by, firing a high-capacity magazine,” the mayor said. “We’re done asking. We’re demanding change and we’re demanding change now.”

She urged Americans “who share our values to let their senators know that they neither need to make change now– or get out of our way.”

Jun 11, 12:44 pm
Buffalo victim’s son: ‘Until it happened to us, we were sitting on the sidelines’

Garnell Whitfield Jr., son of 86-year-old Buffalo, New York, mass shooting victim Ruth Whitfield, told the Washington, D.C., crowd, “We were being naïve to think that it couldn’t happen to us. And until it happened to us, we were sitting on the sidelines.”

“Guns by themselves are only one aspect of a much more insidious problem in America,” he said, calling out the systems he said radicalize mass gunmen, “filling them with weapons and hate-fueled rhetoric.”

“Through their inaction they’re giving their tacit approval,” he said, demanding the passage of an anti-white supremacy hate crime bill.

The Rev. Denise Walden-Glenn, whose brother died of gun violence in Buffalo, addressed the crowd ahead of Whitfield.

She said she’s “working tirelessly to figure out long-term, sustainable solutions” to address gun violence and issues that plague Black and Brown communities across the U.S.

“We need a national government that understands equity,” she said. “We are tired of them not valuing us.”

She added, “If they don’t give us what we ask for, we will vote them out.”

Jun 11, 12:03 pm
Lawmakers join Florida, Michigan rallies

Rep. Ted Deutch, D-Fla., joined a Saturday morning march in Parkland, Florida, home to the 2018 high school mass shooting that killed 17 students and educators.

“In the great struggle to rid our communities of gun violence, the kids will win,” he wrote.

Sen. Debbie Stabenow, D-Mich., attended a local rally in Michigan, where a student held a sign reading, “I should be writing my college essay not my will.”

Jun 11, 10:10 am
Biden tweets support

President Joe Biden tweeted support for the marches Saturday morning.

“Today, young people around the country once again march with [March For Our Lives] to call on Congress to pass commonsense gun safety legislation supported by the majority of Americans and gun owners,” Biden tweeted. “I join them by repeating my call to Congress: do something.”

Jun 11, 9:56 am
Son of Buffalo mass shooting victim among Saturday’s speakers

Speakers at Saturday’s Washington, D.C., rally will include Garnell Whitfield, son of 86-year-old Buffalo mass shooting victim Ruth Whitfield; David Hogg, a Parkland survivor and March For Our Lives co-founder; and Yolanda King, a 14-year-old granddaughter of Martin Luther King Jr.

Garnell Whitfield said to the Senate Judiciary Committee this week, “I ask every one of you to imagine the faces of your mothers as you look at mine, and ask yourself, ‘Is there nothing that we can do?'”

“Because if there is nothing, then respectfully senators, you should yield your positions of authority and influence the others that are willing to lead on this issue. The urgency of the moment demands no less,” he said.

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