Some students booed at Kenzie Swanson as she walked into her nearly empty English classroom last week — on a day when most students were walking out.
Hundreds of teens trekked outside with air horns and signs as she sat quietly with four other students who chose to skip the 17-minute walkout at Lakeville South High School.
"I shoot a gun for a sport," said Swanson, a senior who is on the school's trap shooting team. "I don't think we need to push for gun laws just because something happened. What they were doing [nationally] was more political than a remembrance of those killed."
Since the Parkland, Fla., school shooting last month that killed 17 people, high school students across the U.S. have turned into activists, becoming the new face of the gun control movement. Led by the Parkland survivors, teens nationwide are spearheading rallies and demanding action from lawmakers to stop gun violence. In Minnesota, crowds of students have participated in school walkouts and have pressed policymakers at the State Capitol for stricter gun laws. They plan to rally again this Saturday in St. Paul, as part of the national March for Our Lives event.
But some Minnesota students won't be joining in.
A less visible, less vocal group of high school students — who are no less passionate — disagree with the focus on gun laws as the national gun safety debate spills into classrooms and hallways nationwide.
In South Dakota, a school canceled a school walkout after negative Facebook comments. In Minnesota, as more than 1,000 students rallied earlier this month for gun control on the steps of the State Capitol, one student stood in a solitary counterprotest. And in New Prague, as about 100 students walked out last week, senior Andy Dalsin was asked to leave for holding a sign that read "guns don't kill people, people kill people." The school said he hadn't gotten required preapproval for the sign, so he retreated to a public sidewalk to stand alone with the sign, which also read "we all mourn together."
"It wasn't pro-gun. I was just stating the fact," said Dalsin, who wasn't disciplined for it but was told he could be arrested if he didn't comply. "I didn't support the rhetoric that was being pushed nationally by walkouts. But I wanted to remember the victims."