Monthly Archives: September 2024

Enough.

38 school shootings this year. 38 times our children have faced terror in what should be their safest space. And we’re only in September.

Today’s tragedy at Apalachee High School isn’t just another statistic. It’s four young lives extinguished. It’s countless families shattered. It’s a community forever scarred. And it’s a glaring reminder of our collective failure to protect our most vulnerable.

This is not normal. This is not acceptable. This is a national emergency.

Every day we delay action, we risk more lives. The facts are stark and undeniable:

  • Gun violence is now the leading cause of death for American children and teens
  • Since 2020, more children have died from guns than from car accidents
  • In the time it takes to read this article, another child will be shot in America

Yet, in the face of this carnage, what do we see? Inaction. Excuses. Political paralysis.

Enough.

We don’t lack solutions. We lack the will to implement them:

  1. Universal background checks – supported by 90% of Americans
  2. Red flag laws – proven to reduce gun suicides by up to 14%
  3. Assault weapons ban – could reduce mass shooting fatalities by 70%
  4. Increased funding for mental health and violence prevention programs

These aren’t radical ideas. They’re common-sense measures that could save countless lives. Lives like the four we just lost in Georgia. Lives that could be your child, your sibling, your friend.

To those who oppose these measures, I ask: How many more children must die before you act? How many more parents must bury their kids? How many more schools must become crime scenes?

This is not about politics. This is about survival. This is about whether we, as a nation, value our children’s lives more than we value unfettered access to firearms.

The 2024 election is our chance – perhaps our last chance – to demand real change. We need leaders who will prioritize our children’s lives over political expediency. Leaders who will stand up to the gun lobby — and those who support them — and say:

No more.

A Shadow Cast: ‘City of God: The Fight Rages On’


Fernando Meirelles’ “City of God” (2002) was a cinematic lightning bolt. It grabbed us by the collar and dragged us through Rio’s chaotic favelas with raw power and brutal honesty.

Now HBO gives us “City of God: The Fight Rages On.” A faded Xerox of a masterpiece.

Where the film was a visual symphony, this series is a tepid cover band. The gritty authenticity has been replaced by soap opera gloss.

The series takes Meirelles’ ingredients and produces a bland smoothie. Innovative cinematography? Gone. In its place, paint-by-numbers camerawork.

Most egregious is the dilution of social commentary. The film confronted harsh truths: cyclical poverty, child soldiers, police corruption, racial inequality, limited social mobility, and the normalization of violence. It forced us to witness the brutal realities of favela life.

The series, however, uses these weighty themes as mere backdrop for melodrama.

Characters once vibrant now feel like cardboard cutouts. The film’s urgent rhythm has been replaced by plodding serialized pacing.

Fans tuning in will experience déjà vu – not because it captures the original’s essence, but because it mimics every crime drama of the last decade.

“The Fight Rages On” serves as a stark reminder of the original’s brilliance. It’s a cautionary tale about trying to bottle lightning twice.

The series casts a long, dreary shadow over the film’s legacy. The fight may rage on, but the spirit has long since left the battlefield.

If nothing else, perhaps this pale imitation could serve as a reminder that the original masterpiece exists.​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​ That is work watching.