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Rockville vigil remembers victims of Buffalo, Texas shootings

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A vigil was held Friday in Maryland in front of the Montgomery County courthouse to remember the victims killed in the school shooting in Texas and those who died in the supermarket shooting in Buffalo, New York.

Some 60 people showed up wearing orange, the color of gun violence awareness, and demanding meaningful gun legislation passed in Congress.



Rockville Mayor Bridget Donnell聽Newton organized the vigil. “I am tired of thoughts and prayers; we are all so tired of thoughts and prayers.鈥

Montgomery County Executive Mark Elrich also spoke, recalling a conversation he had this week with a high school student who told Elirch that he just expects there to be shootings at school.

A vigil was held Friday in Maryland in front of the Montgomery County courthouse to remember the victims killed in the school shooting in Texas and those who died in the supermarket shooting in Buffalo, New York. (海角精品黑料/Kyle Cooper)
Some 60 people showed up wearing orange, the color of gun violence awareness, and demanding meaningful gun legislation passed in Congress. (海角精品黑料/Kyle Cooper)
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“This is not acceptable. This is not something we can come to accept, it鈥檚 not something we can come to be numb to,鈥 Elrich said.

Montgomery County Council Chair Gabe Albornoz led the crowd in a breathing exercise to try and help people cope and focus on the opportunity to do something to stop these kind of shootings.

“This is not the world I want my kids to grow up in,” Albornoz said.

Rev. Barry Moultrie, of Mount Calvary Baptist Church, offered a prayer, and said, 鈥淥ur problem is we don鈥檛 love each other enough. It鈥檚 really, really simple.鈥

Council member Andrew Friedson said Americans do need to make a choice “of whether or not we value our children more than we value our guns.”

Twenty-one people, including 19 children, were killed Tuesday at Robb Elementary School in Uvalde. It was the second-deadliest school shooting in the U.S., following the 2012 shooting at Sandy Hook Elementary in Newtown, Connecticut.

Kyle Cooper

Weekend and fill-in anchor Kyle Cooper has been with 海角精品黑料 since 1992. Over those 25 years, Kyle has worked as a street reporter, editor and anchor. Prior to 海角精品黑料, Kyle worked at several radio stations in Indiana and at the Indianapolis Star Newspaper.

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