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Teens hit the beach for D.C. statehood

Members of DisruptDC were in Ocean City, Md., on Wednesday, Aug. 19, 2015, to promote the cause of D.C. statehood.(DisruptDC/Daniel Lewis)
Members of DisruptDC were in Ocean City, Md., on Wednesday, Aug. 19, 2015, to promote the cause of D.C. statehood. (Courtesy Daniel Lewis)
Twenty young people from DisruptDC went to Ocean City, Md., on Wednesday, Aug. 19, 2015, to raise awareness about D.C. statehood. (DisruptDC/Daniel Lewis)
Twenty young people from DisruptDC went to Ocean City, Md., on Wednesday, Aug. 19, 2015, to raise awareness about D.C. statehood. (Courtesy Daniel Lewis)
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Members of DisruptDC were in Ocean City, Md., on Wednesday, Aug. 19, 2015, to promote the cause of D.C. statehood.(DisruptDC/Daniel Lewis)
Twenty young people from DisruptDC went to Ocean City, Md., on Wednesday, Aug. 19, 2015, to raise awareness about D.C. statehood. (DisruptDC/Daniel Lewis)

WASHINGTON — Some local teens are going to Ocean City on a mission and with a message: promoting D.C. statehood.

“It should be seen as a moral injustice,”聽said Daniel Lewis, 18,聽a D.C. resident and a recent graduate of .

On Wednesday, Lewis and 20 other young people planned to hop聽in a van with a huge box of fliers and two massive D.C. flags to evangelize the cause.聽The idea, Lewis said, was聽to approach random people on the boardwalk and put “friendly faces out there with some good information.”

“Once you show someone the basic facts, they’re almost 90 percent of the time on board,” Lewis said. “It’s just getting those basic聽facts to them, and that’s what we’re planning on doing in Ocean City.”

Weeks ago, Lewis founded the grassroots group DisruptDC to inspire teens and college students to take up the cause.聽The Ocean City trip聽is DisruptDC’s聽inaugural event.聽So far, the group聽has 40 members.

Lewis said the group formed in response to the national buzz stirred up by — when he sang a song for D.C. statehood on his HBO show “Last Week Tonight.” They’re hoping the attention will 聽give the issue聽greater聽momentum on Capitol Hill, pushing 聽lawmakers into action.

(Note: there’s coarse language in this video)

“The biggest problem of getting this issue to move in Congress is that not enough people know, and because聽not enough people know, no one cares,” Lewis said.

Lewis, who lives in D.C., said the injustice of 600,000 Americans being subjected to taxation without representation really hit home to him when he voted for the first time.

“People are not angry enough about 聽something they should be furious over,” Lewis said. “We鈥檙e trying to get people, at least D.C. residents,聽to that point.鈥

Kristi King

Kristi King is a veteran reporter who has been working in the 海角精品黑料 newsroom since 1990. She covers everything from breaking news to consumer concerns and the latest medical developments.

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