My theory that anti-gun people in the media jumped at this opportunity and organized some photogenic teenagers who are comfortable in front of the camera to promote their agenda is what happened.
If that's literally what you believe, then I believe you are wrong. These kids organized themselves in Cameron Kamsky's bedroom.
Of course, if that had been the end of it, we would have never heard of it. What the media did was give them a lot of publicity, that's what the media does. That publicity led to a lot of donations, and a lot of organization for things that couldn't have been done by some 17 year olds in their bedroom. These kids were a good story, and the media promoted them. Are these kids media creations? Certainly. Isn't everyone you have ever heard of? How did you hear of them if it were not for the media?
However, there's one other thing that you got wrong. You think the media's agenda is to promote gun control. That's wrong. The media's agenda is to sell toothpaste, and these kids are doing a bang-up job at it.
So, if you think that these kids would have just remained insignificant kids had it not been for media exposure, you are right. They said so themselves in some of those "39 Days" clips. However, if you think the media invented this group and got them together to do the media's bidding, you're wrong. The media is along for the ride, and giving them as much exposure as possible, because in between soundbites they can run commercials.
There are politicians, one in particular I can think of, who understand that and play it for all it's worth. Do you think when they gave that dude so much free air time in 2015 and 2016 that it was part of their agenda to get him elected? Not a chance, but he attracted the crowds and they could sell toothpaste, so they did it.
My theory was only a "conspiracy theory" to the vast numbers of people who believed they were witnessing the birth of a nation wide movement built from the ground up by an extraordinary group of teenagers.
Literally no one believed this.
However, some of us did find what these kids were doing inspiring. It got us off our butts to do at least a tiny bit. I bought a T-shirt. My wife went to a rally. It's not much, but it's a little. It's not that we suddenly witnessed this "movement". We had believed the same way for a long time, and we had pretty much given up on making change, but there was something about this time that made us think this might be the one. Was it the kids? Was it the media who gave them all the attention? Who cares? It doesn't matter. We were there before they were, but we needed a little incentive to do something.
But here we are again talking about these kids. Is that all you'e got?
There are substantive proposals in play. Ban assault weapons. Universal background checks. Age restrictions. Registration of existing weapons. Do you want to talk these substantive issues, or do you want to continue attacking some teenagers.
My guess is you will do the latter, because that is, in fact, all you've got.