Top 36 Quotes & Sayings by Emma Gonzalez

Explore popular quotes and sayings by an American activist Emma Gonzalez.
Last updated on September 17, 2024.
Emma Gonzalez

X González is an American activist and advocate for gun control. As a high school senior they survived the February 2018 Stoneman Douglas High School shooting in Parkland, Florida, the deadliest high school shooting in U.S. history, and in response co-founded the gun-control advocacy group Never Again MSD.

Since the time of the Founding Fathers, and since they added the Second Amendment to the Constitution, our guns have developed at a rate that leaves me dizzy.
If you want to help arm the schools, arm them with school supplies, books, therapists - things they actually need and can make use of.
That's the number one rule after you lose someone is go to somebody else, go to the people around you, be with the people that you love. — © Emma Gonzalez
That's the number one rule after you lose someone is go to somebody else, go to the people around you, be with the people that you love.
Many people in this world are not raised to understand the concept of consent, in all walks of life, and it's important that abusers of consent not be treated as victims when they are rightfully exposed.
I draw, paint, crochet, sew, embroider - anything productive I can do with my hands while watching Netflix.
I'm an 18-year-old girl, at the end of the day. I'm a human person, and so are the people that I work with.
Crying is a kind of communication, and communication is awesome.
Teachers do not need to be armed with guns to protect their classes; they need to be armed with a solid education in order to teach their classes.
My parents wouldn't let me shave it earlier, so I made a PowerPoint presentation to convince them. I strategically put pictures of bald women in there.
You don't drive a NASCAR on the street, no matter how fun it might be, just like you don't need an AR-15 to protect yourself when walking home at night. No one does.
I am not a crisis actor.
I think there's an incredible amount of people who know not only what we're feeling but know people who have lost their lives to gun violence.
The problem of gun violence goes beyond the countless demographic differences between people.
What matters is that the majority of American people have become complacent in a senseless injustice that occurs all around them. What matters is that most American politicians have become more easily swayed by money than by the people who voted them into office.
In a little over six minutes, 17 of our friends were taken from us. Fifteen were injured. And everyone - absolutely everyone - in the Douglas Community was forever altered.
The pro-gun propaganda peddled by the National Rifle Association feeds myths about gun ownership, and these myths arguably perpetuate the suffering of thousands of Americans each year.
I feel like in my senior year of high school, I had my clothes a lot more figured out. I had my hair figured out.
I'm a mess, and I'm messy. I'm very, very bad at organizing myself.
Get out and vote. If you can't vote, then register other people to vote. Get people to the polls; make sure that people who need to vote can vote.
To every politician who is taking donations from the NRA, shame on you.
I shaved my head a week or two before senior year. People used to ask me why, and the main reason is that having hair felt terrible.
We're not saying 'no guns.' We are saying we want to regulate semi-automatic weapons and the accessories that make them fully automatic because fully automatic weapons are banned.
If I wear a hat and sunglasses, not as many people recognize me.
I'm so indecisive that I can't pick a favorite color, and I'm allergic to 12 things.
You might not be a big fan of politics, but you can still participate. All you need to do is vote for people you believe will work on these issues, and if they don't work the way they should, then it is your responsibility to call them, organize a town hall, and demand that they show up - hold them accountable.
I was born in 1999, just a few months after 13 people were left dead after a shooting at Columbine High School in Colorado. — © Emma Gonzalez
I was born in 1999, just a few months after 13 people were left dead after a shooting at Columbine High School in Colorado.
If I'm able to communicate one thing to adults, it would be this: it should not be easier to purchase a gun than it is to obtain a driver's license, and military-grade weapons should not be accessible in civilian settings.
It's Florida. Hair is just an extra sweater I'm forced to wear.
Trees face many difficulties, what with deforestation and pollution, but that didn't stop me from wanting to be one - to just stop feeling and live.
Any time I had my hair in a ponytail, it would give me a headache by the end of the day.
As constituents, we've become lazy in terms of what we want and how to get it. If we, as a constituency, don't like what Congress is doing, but 90 percent of incumbents get reelected every year, that's a problem.
In Florida, to buy a gun, you do not need a permit, you do not need a gun license, and once you buy it, you do not need to register it. You do not need a permit to carry a concealed rifle or shotgun. You can buy as many guns as you want at one time.
Insecurities are debilitating a lot of times.
Mental illness and gun violence are not directly correlated, but when the two go hand in hand, Americans - often children - lose their lives.
Meeting with people is awesome in every sense of the word. It can inspire you with glee. It can inspire you with happiness. It can inspire you with sadness and melancholy, but also hope.
We need to digitize gun-sales records, mandate universal background checks, close gun-show loopholes and straw-man purchases, ban high-capacity magazines, and push for a comprehensive assault weapons ban with an extensive buyback system.
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