The Rural Blog: Rural students face backlash after supporting gun control following school shootings


Recent school shootings have inspired a wave of gun-control activism, some of it from students, and a few of those students from rural areas. “In a more liberal city like Parkland, Fla., or at a rally in Washington, these students might have been celebrated as young leaders,” Jack Healy reports for The New York Times.

“But in rural, conservative parts of the country where farm fields crackle with target practice and children grow up turkey hunting with their parents, the new wave of student activism clashes with bedrock support for gun rights.”

Marshall County student Hailey Case wearing an “Enough is Enough” shirt.
(NYT photo by Andrea Morales)

Some students in Benton, Kentucky, began speaking out for gun control after the deadly January shooting at their high school. Soon afterward, friends started shunning them, locals on social media made fun of them and said they should have died during the Marshall County High School shooting, Healey reports. Debate and action in Benton have largely focused on how to detect potentially dangerous students and keep schools safer instead of limiting gun rights: After the shooting, the high school hired more armed officers and locked many of the school’s doors. Every morning, students are scanned with metal detector wands and have their backpacks searched. 

“Speaking out in a place like Marshall County, Ky., carries a price — measured in frayed friendships, arguments with parents and animosity within the same walls where classmates were gunned down,” Healy reports.

Ten high school students from Campbell County High School in Gillette, Wyoming, faced similar backlash when they marched downtown to demand tighter gun laws in solidarity with the survivors of the Parkland, Florida, shooting. The protest was a hard sell in a state with more guns per capita than any other state and rising sales in each of the past five years. “More than 80 percent of adults in Campbell County have firearms in their homes,” Eli Saslow reports for The Washington Post.

Moriah Engdahl waits to address the school board.

Moriah Engdahl waits to address the school board. (Washington Post photo by Jabin Botsford)

“In the days since the march, the ‘Campbell County Ten’ had become the object of profane graffiti, the inspiration for a rival Freedom March and the favorite target of a new Instagram account, ‘Campbell County Students for America,’ which shared memes comparing gun protesters to Hitler,” Saslow reports. One of them is Moriah Engdahl, 16. Her father, Alan, had more than 250 guns until he lost the right to own firearms after committing a drug felony in 2006. 

Moriah’s support of gun control has been a source of tension between the two, with Alan teasing her frequently, asking her if she’d managed to get everyone’s guns yet. Though Moriah, a student journalist, had an independent streak, she had never questioned gun rights until the Parkland shooting. The more she researched online, though, the more she became convinced that the problem in Parkland and at home in Gillette (which has one of the nation’s highest suicide rates) is unfettered access to guns. 

Moriah spoke to the school board recently in an attempt to dissuade them from arming teachers. She went alone since the original 10 students protesting in Gillette had eroded to four: one student’s furious mother pulled her daughter into the car during the protest, and in the days afterward, a few students said they wanted to focus on less controversial issues like remembering victims or discouraging bullying. The remaining four included Moriah and the outspoken editor of the school newspaper, and two others.

At a meeting at Starbucks to plan their next steps, one lamented that “Even my dad has started calling me a gun-control libtard,” Saslow reports.

The Rural Blog is a service of the Institute for Rural Journalism and Community Issues at the University of Kentucky.


2 thoughts on “The Rural Blog: Rural students face backlash after supporting gun control following school shootings

  1. Congratulations to Moriah Engdahl for speaking with compassion and intelligence. I “celebrate her as a young leader,” to quote your article. I am moved by her courage and trust that her words and actions will, over time, make a positive difference in her family, community and the wider world.
    Moriah, stay strong. Continue to build your support network. Remember your commitment to non-anger, or, said positively, remaining respectful and calm.
    I live just outside of Charlottesville. We saw lots of guns last August. They did not look like a source of safety. They looked and were brandished to express power, control and intimidation. Safety is the issue you are raising. May your efforts be rewarded. Thank you.

  2. Moriah, I hope you can continue with your thoughtful attempts to work toward school safety. There are many people who agree with you and will band with you. Every step you take is one in the right direction of student safety. Your information on suicide touched my heart. This is a significant problem that exists today and touches the lives of so many people. It is never easy to stand up to a bully but hang in there and follow your heart. Think for yourself. You have the spirit of a leader—this world needs you.

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