This student describes how an ordinary Valentine’s Day suddenly turned into fear, chaos and a life‑changing trauma.
Who is David Hogg?
This event is described as an attack on the peaceful transfer of power in the United States
What is the storming of the U.S. Capitol on January 6, 2021?
This organization began as a post–Civil War marksmanship club before becoming a political powerhouse.
What is the NRA?
This film explores a mother’s guilt and society’s search for explanations after a school massacre.
What is We Need to Talk About Kevin?
This term describes groups that reject mainstream politics and often use conspiracy theories to justify action.
What is extremism?
This emotional reaction hits Lauren the morning after the shooting, when she realizes her friends will never see another sunrise.
What is grief (or survivor’s guilt)?
This group is known for its paramilitary structure and played a key role in breaching the Capitol.
Who are the Oath Keepers?
This NRA leader delivered the 2022 speech “An Important Message,” framing gun rights as essential to freedom.
Who is Wayne LaPierre?
This story describes a future America where the country has split into two because people can no longer agree politically.
What is The Big Split?
This concept explains how Americans increasingly live in ideological “bubbles” with little cross‑party contact.
What is political polarization?
This chapter presents a concrete political programme including background checks, magazine limits and research funding.
What is “The Parkland Manifesto”?
This far‑right group, often wearing black and yellow, was described as using “organized chaos” during the attack.
Who are the Proud Boys?
This rhetorical appeal is used when LaPierre warns Americans that “evil walks among us.”
What is pathos (fear appeal)?
This object in Kevin becomes a symbol of Kevin’s growing hostility, especially when he uses it to upset his mother.
What is the bow and arrow?
This communication strategy spreads simplified, emotional messages to mobilize supporters.
What is populist rhetoric?
This reason explains why many Parkland students did not immediately hide during the shooting, since they first thought the loud noises were part of a drill.
What is “because they believed it was a code‑red drill and not a real attack”
This is what rioters tried to stop when they wanted Congress to stop counting the votes from the election.
What is the counting/confirming of the election results?
This argument claims that more guns—not fewer—are needed to stop violence, a central NRA talking point.
What is the “good guy with a gun” argument?
This situation in The Big Split shows how people stop listening to each other and only trust those who agree with them.
What is living in echo chambers (or only listening to your own side)?
This process happens when extreme ideas spread because people repeat them inside closed groups without hearing other viewpoints.
What is radicalization?
A well-known American politician publicly questioned the Parkland students’ motives and suggested they were being influenced or controlled by political actors rather than speaking for themselves
Who is President Donald Trump?
This happens when people spread false claims about an election to make others doubt the result.
What is spreading election misinformation?
This part of the U.S. Constitution is often used by the NRA to argue that Americans have the right to own guns.
What is the Second Amendment?
This idea appears in both We Need to Talk About Kevin and #NeverAgain: that violent events can leave long‑lasting emotional and social consequences for many people, not just the ones directly involved.
What is the wider impact of violence?
This pattern appears when people use simple “us vs. them” thinking to explain complex political issues.
What is tribal thinking?