From here:

Conservative Twitter is mocking Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School shooting survivor David Hogg for his complaint to Axios about the school’s clear backpack policy, an apparent added security measure students are supposed to come back to after spring break. Hogg, who has been one of the most outspoken and visible Never Again campaigners since the deadly shooting — and who was even accused of being a “crisis actor” — said the normal backpack ban is “unnecessary” and “embarrassing for a lot of students.” “After we come back from Spring Break, they’re requiring us all to have clear backpacks…it’s unnecessary. It’s embarrassing for a lot of the students,” he said. The way this was received on Twitter was essentially, “So, how does it feel to be have your rights limited by common sense?”

More than that, but it shows how shallow activists typically are. For we easily mimic the activists’ spin and ask, “Why does David Hogg think kids should die so he doesn’t have to carry a clear packpack?”

Activists always seem to demand that other people change because of some “crisis.” But once they themselves have to make some inconvenient change because of the very crisis they’ve screamed about, suddenly, the crisis ceases to be that big of a crisis. Imagine how that works.

The bottom line is that if kids are in such serious danger from guns (and they are not), then don’t be surprised when the state takes authoritarian measures in the schools to “protect the kids.” You asked for it.

And I think that’s the problem with these teenage activists. Because they don’t have much life experience, they still think in black-and-white, magical terms: ” Pass a law to save the kids from death, so that if you don’t pass the law, it must mean you are evil.” You would think that the backpack regulations, along with the need to wear nametags, would be a learning opportunity for the kids. Here’s a simple question for them: “If you oppose making the students wear name tags and carry clear backpacks, does that mean you support the killing of kids in school?”