March For Our Lives recap: Frustrated Americans rally for gun reform across US

Rallies spanned D.C. to Florida to Michigan to New York.

Angry and frustrated Americans joined rallies and marches across the U.S. Saturday to advocate for gun reform in the wake of the back-to-back mass shootings in Uvalde, Texas, and Buffalo, New York.

The nationwide event was 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.

The 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.


0

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.


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?"


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.


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.