Today is really about listening to kids, but here’s my message to high school students walking out today (sorry in advance for too-long thread): I have two kids, in second and fifth grade over at Hillsborough Elementary. Every day when they leave for school I make sure to 1/
to kiss them good bye and tell them I love them. And this is like, a thing with me. They walk to school and I will call them back down the drive or chase them up the block if they leave without this ritual because - and I know other parents do this too - if something should 2/
happen to me or god forbid, them, before we see each other again I want our last memory of each other to be this simple, intimate show of affection. When the Parkland shooting happened, one of the instinctual things to say as we consider those 17 dead high schoolers is 3/
“I can’t imagine”. Can’t imagine what they went through, what their parents and loved ones are going through. But you see I kiss my kids good bye every day because I DO imagine. I imagine them right now, today - my oldest taking some godforsaken math test and my younger one 4/
doing a wax museum as Wilma Rudolph. And I imagine those normal school things being interrupted by rampaging gunman, always a man. And I imagine them huddling with their classmates in a corner. And I imagine how pointless that will be if the shooter gets in the room. 5/
But I also imagine this - for them, for you, for every kid in this country - I imagine schools that are safe. I imagine nurses in every school. I imagine social workers in every school. I imagine 100 percent of kids in school with safe housing, three meals a day, and at least 6/
a couple good friends. These are the things we need to create safe schools - not guns, not more police, not metal detectors. We need safety and connection and community.
Before too long you will leave high school. You’ll go to college or trade school or get a job or just move 7/
away somewhere new for the heck of it and you will get distracted. So I am here now and looking you in the eyes and saying that is okay and normal...BUT. As you grow and change don’t lose track of this sense of urgency you feel right now. You must keep fighting. 8/
Because us who came before you have messed this up so badly. Don’t be like us, be better. Keep fighting for safe and gun free schools. Connect your struggle here in Orange County to kids in Chicago, and Baltimore, and yes, Florida who are all organizing against against gun 9/
violence whether it’s in our schools or in our neighborhoods. Keep fighting for the rights of life liberty and the pursuit of happiness to outweigh the right to carry the deadliest weapons, whether the lives you’re fighting for are middle class ones, rich ones, poor ones, 10/
black ones, white ones, Latinx ones, straight ones, queer ones, disabled ones. Keep fighting! And when they tell you to calm down, don’t calm down, keep fighting! And when they tell you that you don’t understand, tell them no, THEY don’t understand and keep fighting! 11/
And when they tell you it’s impossible, that this - a society and culture absolutely saturated with guns is just how it is, there’s nothing you can do about it - you think of those kids at Parkland, you think of those babies at Newtown, 12/
and you think of those kids in Chicago killed by guns bought and imported across state lines, and You. Keep. Fighting. I know you can do this. I believe in you. #Enough#NotOneMore#NationalWalkoutDay 13/13
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I am the mayor of Hillsborough and I have a few thoughts about this. I want to start by centering the family on the corner who was standing right there in direct line of receiving these vile anti-Semitic words and gestures.
I know this mom and her family well. She is an incredible person and having her and her family in our town makes our town a better place. She and her kids do community service yard work all over town - for free - because she has a deep commitment to helping others, 2/
building relationships, and teaching her children these values. Not only does she do this work with her kids, but she shows up. If there is an opportunity or a call to show up, whether it is hurricane relief or a racial justice rally, she is there. 3/
We are all tired, but now, more than ever, is the time for our community to turn toward each other and support all the things that make Hillsborough special. #HillsboroughStrong ♥️
“The meals you buy from local restaurants put meals on their employees’ tables. The holiday gift you buy in September helps pay a retail shop’s rent in October. The art you support keeps visitors coming to see what else we have to offer.”
“The clarion call for building a society where everyone feels truly safe and cared for is one that must be answered. Hillsborough has our own painful past and present. We still have much work to do to create a community that truly values Black lives.”
Let’s talk about this story. It is easy to read this story and think it is just a story about generosity. It is definitely a story about generosity, and love of community. And if you are in the position to do what the people in this story are doing... newsobserver.com/opinion/articl…
I highly encourage it - eagerly embrace it here in our town. I do not aim to diminish that real generosity and community love.
But this story also shows how broken things are. Survival of our local business ecosystems and all those who work in it should not...
be left to the generosity of wealthy people. A sane and generous safety net for small businesses and workers is what we need. There is enough money, made up of our tax dollars, at the federal level, to do this....
Listening in on (at least part of) a zoom meeting for OC area small businesses. Too many partners making this happen to name, but thank you to all the government jurisdictions, economic development folks, and both local chambers of commerce. @AaronNelson1 giving a full update &..
Message he brings from folks at UNC Hospitals: The one thing people in the community to do to help us heed the call to stay home as much as possible and practice diligent physical/social distancing from others. (Paraphrase)
Also reports of at least 1000 people laid off in this area already. No waiting period required before receiving unemployment. @GraigMeyer said yesterday that employers should go ahead and lay ppl off so they can go ahead and get unemployment (rather than cutting folks to 0 hours)
I am on the town board of Hillsborough, NC, and I appreciate the alarm shared by people across the country about the Klan showing face (literally) here yesterday - including amplification by @soledadobrien and @BetoORourke - but something important is getting lost in the story. 1
As word quickly spread that they were here, 70-80 local residents and town officials stopped what they were doing on a Saturday afternoon to rush downtown to stand against the Klan in solidarity and anti racist love. Many of the people were eating at restaurants up the street. 2
Others, like my husband & my colleague Matt Hughes @mghughesnc were simply driving by on the way to the store or other destinations, and pulled over to park and join the protest against the Klan. Matt was in a tux, on his way to the Durham Ctte on the Affairs of Black People 3