On Wednesday, I and hundreds of other students met at Central High School in St. Paul and marched on the Minnesota State Capitol to demand stricter gun laws ("Student walkout leads to Capitol," March 8). We waved signs and screamed until our throats hurt and our voices were hoarse. We made ourselves heard.
And yet Thursday, there I was looking at articles about the march, scrolling through the comments, and nearly to a one, they call us "brainwashed," "ignorant," "puppets of the liberal agenda." They say we don't understand what we're saying, that kids should stay out of politics, that most students only came because they got to miss school.
I am furious. These people use our age as an excuse to block out everything we say without ever hearing it, no matter how loud we are.
We marched because we are tired of our peers being murdered. We marched because we don't want to be next. We marched because the only way to end gun violence is better gun laws, but most of all? Because nobody else is doing anything.
So … it's up to us.
Evelyn Lewis, St. Paul
MOVIES AND CULTURE
Actually, people seem to enjoy violence on film — worldwide
A March 7 letter writer complained about the violence in movies and connected the hypothesis that America loves violence. However, three of those movies he mentioned that were reviewed on March 2 as R-rated and violent are not American. One is from Chile, another is from Germany and the third is from Britain. And apparently he also is not aware of the bloody animation shows and movies that are made in Japan.
Essentially, the better statement is that the whole world likes to watch violent entertainment, and that includes me, since I saw the movie from Chile and the one from Germany last week. Perhaps the problem is that America (and possibly due to lax gun laws) is possibly more likely to have these extremely violent acts than other First World nations.
William Cory Labovitch, South St. Paul
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