During Monday’s edition of MSNBC Live With Stephanie Ruhle, reporter Mariana Atencio interviewed some members of the Santa Fe High School baseball team, including two who got shot during Friday’s mass shooting that killed ten people. Atencio repeatedly tried to get them to become gun control warriors like many of the teens who survived the recent mass shooting in Parkland, Florida.

In the wake of the Parkland shooting, many students from Douglas High School became outspoken gun control advocates and media heroes, including frequent TV guests David Hogg and Emma Gonzalez. These students headlined the “March for Our Lives,” a large gathering demanding Congress pass gun control that took place in Washington, D.C. on March 24.

About halfway through the interview, Atencio brought up Parkland: “You think about Parkland. It happened in February. There’s been a national debate about gun safety and gun reform. What do you guys think should be done?” She may have hoped to hear the students channel their inner David Hoggs and demand gun control. Instead, Santa Fe High School student Trenton Beazley simply advised students across America to “be kind to others.”

Atencio also asked them “Have you heard what you want to hear from lawmakers, from the Governor, from your Senators?” She got this answer: “I haven’t heard much. But I’ve seen stuff about our school. Somebody said that they’re going to be donating metal detectors to our school. But I just think just simply locking the doors to anywhere, just locking the doors from outside, having the kids all come in one way, looking for suspicious things, locking the doors to every classroom. That would prevent a lot of things from happening.”

Atencio tried to get them to become gun control advocates one final time, suggesting that they have a “responsibility” to become gun control advocates like their counterparts in Parkland: “We saw the teens in Parkland really become the voices of the movement for gun reform across the country. Now your voices have become all important. How do you feel about that responsibility on your shoulders right now, Trenton?”

Once again, Atencio did not likely get the answer she had hoped for. Beazley responded to her question by saying “It’s just kind of, you know, what it is. You know, it’s sad that it happens everywhere but, you know, you just kind of have to go through it.”

The media has expressed disappointment that the tragedy in Santa Fe has not prompted the same calls for gun control that resulted from the mass shooting in Parkland. Even though they probably did not give her the answers and activism she wanted, Atencio still praised the Santa Fe students for showing “unity, resilience, incredible example, not only for the community of Santa Fe but for the rest of the country and the world.”

A transcript is below. Click "expand" to read more.