Blogpost about Grad School

Terrell Williams

It’s astonishing how much can happen in five years. I can remember my teachers asking me as a youth, “Where do you see yourself in five years?”. While that question has always been hard to answer, it felt impossible to answer after a narrow escape from death. 

On a warm spring day in 2017, I left my car running as I quickly ran in a convenience store. I was in the store for less than one minute. Upon my exit, I was confronted with a thief attempting to steal my car. As I realized what was happening, I pulled out my gun, loaded the chamber, and pointed my gun in the direction of the thief. Little did I know, the thief had multiple people across the street looking out for him. As soon as they saw my gun, they started firing their own weapons. As a result of the attempted carjacking, I suffered two gunshot wounds. One bullet entered my chest, drove through my right lung, and then exited my body after striking my spine. Another bullet pierced the right side of my neck and became lodged in the left side of my chin. 

In that moment, I knew I was going to die. There was no way I could survive such a significant injury. Before I took my last breath, there was one last thing that I needed to do, pray. I vividly remember pleading to God, saying the same words over and over, “God, please take care of me”. As I write these words today, it is clear he did more than take care of me. God strengthened, guided, and propelled me to a level I never knew was imaginable. 

I grew up in a neighborhood where the options seemed limited, however, I now see that is far from the truth. The truth is, we rarely see all our options due to a toxic smoke bomb of uncertainty, fear, and disinformation. While this is the case for many others like me, defying the odds, overcoming adversity, and navigating unforeseen circumstances are attributes we are all capable of developing. However, trying to accomplish this alone is 10x harder.  

Over the past five years, I’ve been blessed to have the support and guidance of family and friends, but today, I specifically want to acknowledge the impact Whitney/Strong has had on my journey. When I first met Whitney, we were at a trauma survivors’ event at University of Louisville Hospital. We’re in a club that nobody ever wants to join, but I’m extremely grateful that our paths crossed. Through gun violence, we developed an unbreakable bond that has led to more than I ever could have expected. 

For starters, I was introduced to an amazing group of people that I otherwise wouldn’t have been introduced to. At first, it felt like I came from a different Louisville than many of the people I was brought into contact with. Gun violence was a part of everyday life for me, and the people I met had only recently been impacted by gun violence. However, working with the board and other W/S supporters, I saw and felt their support to not only end mass gun violence, but various types of gun violence, including the form I was most familiar with. This showed me that people from outside the neighborhood do genuinely care about the well-being of people like myself, which, in my eyes, meant that change isn’t just possible, but it is imminent. 

The story doesn’t stop there. As I get older, I realize that continuously developing personally and professionally is a must if we want to make the biggest impact we can before our short time on Earth is over. W/S is providing me with the opportunity to do just that by gaining real-world experience in a field that I love. Through W/S, I have not only been able to develop accounting skills that will aid me in succeeding in an ever-changing industry, but it has also helped me build a resume like no other. A resume that has led to my enrollment in grad school. 

In the Spring, I will be graduating from the University of Louisville with my bachelor’s degree in accounting. In the Fall, I will be starting the Jenkins MAC program at North Carolina State University. To make things even grander, I received a firm-sponsored scholarship from RSM US that ensures grad school is paid for in full and provides me with a full-time position upon graduation!

If someone asked me five years ago where I thought I would be today, it sure as hell wouldn’t be the reality of my situation. But that’s what is so rewarding about staying persistent, open-minded, and surrounded by loved ones. You look up, and BOOM, the fruits of your labor are more than you ever could have imagined. Even though we all will have different paths in life, anything that can be dreamed, can be achieved. I’m beyond grateful that W/S has contributed and will continue to contribute to the success of my journey through opportunities, friendships, and love. 

A New Year Message

Whitney/Strong Family,

The past three years have been a whirlwind. First, with my miraculous survival and recovery. Second, with the building of Whitney/Strong. While I look back on all that we have been able to accomplish together with great pride, I know that our story is just beginning. 

I am proud, but I will never be too proud when the number of shootings and firearm deaths in America continue to climb. Numbers drive me, and gun violence statistics over the last two years have been abysmal for our country. The overall firearm death rate in the U.S. reached the highest level ever recorded in 2020, claiming the lives of more than 45,000 Americans¹. This number is a 14% increase over 2019, and is largely driven by an increase in homicides of nearly 5,000. There is a reason 2020 was deemed the most violent year in decades by the Washington Post.

2021 data is not yet final, but initial results show the raw number of firearm deaths as comparable. 

We have political and cultural factors that make progress on reducing gun violence in America seem impossible. It is easy to believe that change will never come. I get it, but I don’t buy it.

You may wonder how I can have hope for a future with less gun violence in the face of these challenges. To truly answer that question I would need more time than you can spend reading this email. So simply put, I have hope because of gratitude, your support, and strategy. Let me share with you why I have hope for 2022.

Gratitude

I have a well filled with gratitude. I often imagine it is even too deep for me to see the bottom of it. I will keep returning to the well for the sustenance I need to keep going. My New Years’ wish is for you to find your own well, and visit it often for the energy you need to make a difference in the lives of others.

Support

In the last three years of building Whitney/Strong we have seen our supporter network across Ohio and Kentucky increase to 5,000+. This is a giant leap from our early days in late 2018 as we celebrated reaching 100 followers on social media! 

I could list many examples of your loyal support. Helping us meet our fundraising goal to unlock a $50,000 grant from the Gannett Foundation. Generously participating in Cincinnati Gives to ensure we secured first place, and an additional $12,000 in prize dollars. I doubt you recognize what these gestures mean to me and the Whitney/Strong team. Your support is not only the vehicle to ensure a future with less gun violence, it is a steady message of encouragement to our small and mighty team.

Strategy

We talk a lot about strategy at Whitney/Strong and I want you to be a part of those conversations. The root causes of gun violence are vast: poverty, under-resourced public services, lack of opportunity and perceptions of hopelessness, and easy access to firearms by high-risk people just to name a few. Whitney/Strong alone will never be able to tackle all of them.

From the very beginning we have set a strategy that prioritizes what we have in common, not our differences. Our carefully-considered solutions are not only rooted in common ground, they are evidence-based. We understand that when progress is limited, we must only spend energy on solutions that will work.

We know the importance of setting short- and long-term goals.  Right now, we are focused on training as many people as possible on ways they can reduce gun violence and funding research so we are better prepared to advocate for policy change in the future.  In the long term, we will continue to build a coalition of elected officials willing to embrace bipartisan legislation to reduce gun violence.  Legislative change will take time, but it will be worth it.  

When you understand that we are simultaneously creating change now, and greasing the political wheels for it in the future, hope is much easier to come by. 

There is strong evidence for hope with Whitney/Strong.

Thank you for being a part of our story. 2022 is going to be a big year and I am happy to kick it off alongside you! I encourage you to follow along with our work through email and social media.  Throughout the year, we’ll be sharing ways that you can get involved with this important work.  We need your help to continue creating change.  

With you by our side, we enter 2022 with renewed energy and hope for a future with less gun violence.

Gratefully,

Whitney

¹Center for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC). 

A Message from Whitney Austin

In case you are unaware, an alleged TikTok challenge promoting school violence is trending today. The threat is so real that at some schools across the country, increased police presence is necessary and parents are choosing to keep their children home.

As parents and guardians, we accept certain risks when we send our children off to school. For example, we accept that they may not be treated fairly by their peers, or that they might not make the team.

What we cannot accept is gun violence within our schools.

This alleged trend did not develop in a vacuum. It is a symptom of how broken we are as Americans. It is a glaring sign that our children are desperate to be loved and supported.

If you aren’t ready to accept the risk of gun violence within our schools, please join us @whitstrongorg. We seek common ground to end gun violence through education, legislation, and research.

In the meantime, please remember to:

  •       Safely store your firearms

  •       Believe someone when they tell you plans of self-harm or violence, and get help from a mental health professional or law enforcement

  •       Sign our petition for Crisis Aversion and Rights Retention

  •       Love the children in your life and advocate for their mental health needs

 We can do better together.

Whitney

“In the room where it happened…”

Our family just returned from a vacation that placed us in Philadelphia on the Fourth of July. In all of America there is no better place from which to celebrate our independence.

If you can, take your children to this most fabulous historical wonderland. My hope is that my children never forget being in the room where the Declaration of Independence and Constitution were signed, where the first peaceful transfer of power occurred from Washington to Adams, where Kentucky became a state, and where Congress held debates and passed bills for the first ten years of our early life as a country.

Being there in the exact place these monumental events occurred was powerful. Shivers-up-your-spine kind of powerful. The Founders desire to do something special was guided by this belief.

We hold these truths to be self-evident, that all men are created equal, that they are endowed by their Creator with certain unalienable Rights among which are Life, Liberty and the Pursuit of Happiness.

So noble. So righteous.

Have we always succeeded in this principle? No, not hardly. There are many moments that feel so far from this in my journey to keep us safe from gun violence as the Executive Director and Co-Founder of Whitney/Strong. Even more for our friends that still feel this principle of equality is not within their reach.

Still, I stand by this revolutionary declaration and what it sought to provide. My commitment to ensuring these rights are available to all, the least of which is a country not plagued by gun violence, is still fully intact.

For we do not have access to life if it is senselessly stripped from us by a bullet. For we do not have freedom if we must regularly fear gun violence in public places. And the pursuit of happiness? Well, it seems irrelevant to a country burdened by the epidemic of gun violence. 

Visiting Philadelphia was special. This country is still special, but gun violence threatens that. I will continue to work and pray every day that change will come, with your help. Our children deserve it.

Ohio Gun Violence Statistics

Last year brought a lot of changes due to the COVID-19 pandemic. In addition to major changes in just about every conceivable aspect of our lives, rates of depression and violence were higher than in many years past. This is surprising considering most people were on lockdown for the greater part of the year. Alarmingly, more guns were also purchased in the first three months of 2021 than in any three month period in state history.

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These statistics show that the work to end gun violence is needed now more than ever.
Support the work of Whitney/Strong with your donation today.


Kentucky Gun Violence Statistics

Last year brought a lot of changes due to the COVID-19 pandemic. In addition to major changes in just about every conceivable aspect of our lives, rates of depression and violence were higher than in many years past. This is surprising considering most people were on lockdown for the greater part of the year. Alarmingly, more guns were also purchased in the first three months of 2021 than in any three month period in state history.

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*Click anywhere in the box, when code is highlighted, simply right click and copy or “cmd + c” on Mac & “Ctrl + c” on Windows - Please remember to keep attribution! Thank you!


These statistics show that the work to end gun violence is needed now more than ever.
Support the work of Whitney/Strong with your donation today.

Firearm Statistics Infographic

Gun violence is not “someone else’s issue.” It is an issue that, statistically, affect each and every one of us at some point in our lives. Consider sharing this on social media, or in your blog or your website. The more we can all openly discuss the issues, statistics and solutions - without politics or opinions - we can start to see a brighter and safer future for us all. You can use the provided embed code at the bottom of the infographic for easy sharing!

Gun Violence Infographic

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These statistics show that the work to end gun violence is needed now more than ever.
Support the work of Whitney/Strong with your donation today.

I Am Disappointed

I am disappointed. There are no other words to describe my feelings about the passage of Ohio’s Senate Bill 175, otherwise known as “Stand Your Ground.” For those who may not know, this bill passed the Ohio General Assembly and was signed into law by Governor Mike DeWine earlier this month. Let me explain my disappointment in a way that’s true to my beliefs and the work of Whitney/Strong - with real data and research.

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Stand Your Ground will not make our community safer and I shared the following research with Governor DeWine’s team. 

With little federal funding, clear, data-driven solutions for reducing gun violence are few and far between. This is why RAND’s 2020 Gun Policy of America Initiative is so important. In 2020 RAND reviewed studies by dozens of researchers investigating the impact of U.S. firearm policies. The initiative aimed to develop a “shared set of facts that have been established through a transparent, nonpartisan and impartial review process.”

In their review, RAND found that “Stand Your Ground” policies had the highest level of correlation - “supportive evidence” - to increases in gun violence.  In their words, this law “actually makes people less safe, and instead more likely to the be victim of a firearm homicide.”

This finding is a big deal and should not be ignored. While I can see how people believe that a gun can save you in a moment of violence outside of your home, the data do not support this theory. I am both a gun owner and a believer in data. 

Additionally, Stand Your Ground continues to draw criticism from black and brown communities, citing implicit and explicit bias, and the role it plays when someone must determine whether defense with deadly force is warranted. One Texas A&M study found that when whites use the stand-your-ground defense against black attackers they are more successful than when blacks use the defense against white attackers.

Ohio lawmakers and Governor DeWine ignored both rigorously reviewed evidence from RAND and the pleas from so many in communities of color to veto this bill.

I am disappointed.

Sometimes this fight feels impossible. I stood alongside Governor DeWine when he introduced his STRONG Ohio proposal and participated in proponent hearings. Sadly, the bill never made it to a committee vote. It is unbelievably disheartening to see “Stand Your Ground” legislation so easily check off each of the critical boxes necessary for passage, and done so in a condensed timeline, in a lame-duck session, during a global pandemic. It feels like an alternate universe.

I will not be deterred. The Whitney/Strong team will not be deterred. Our focus on responsible gun ownership offers us a large net to cast with many policy opportunities for saving lives. We will keep knocking on the doors of those in a position of power to make good policy. My experience on 9/6/18 drives me to take every meeting, explore every effective policy, and get back up after every punch.

Governor DeWine states that he is not giving up on his larger package meant to reduce gun violence in Ohio. He continues to reiterate his support for improving the national background check system and tougher sentences for violent criminals who illegally possess guns. 

I look forward to my next meeting with him to see what effective policy we try next. Change will come to those who persevere.

Whitney

 

 

 

 

 


Honoring a Father with Service

Dayton Oregon District Shooting Survivor Tells His Story


Dion Green is the founder of FUDGE, a non-profit group that provides support to victims and survivors of gun violence. Dion is a survivor of the August 4, 2019 mass shooting in the Oregon District in Dayton, Ohio. His father was killed in that shooting.

He joined Whitney to co-host A Night For Life: Reflections on Survival in September. For this blog post, we asked Dion to share more about himself, his father, and the mission of FUDGE.


Tell us a little about yourself.

My name is Dion Green. I am from Springfield Ohio but have been living in Dayton for a while. I have one sister named Megan. I am a graduate student at Keller Graduate finishing up my MBA. I used to work at St. Vincent DePaul, but I decided to start a non-profit with the acronym of FUDGE - my father’s last name, but also standing for “Flourishing Under Distress Given Encouragement”.

My non-profit focuses on survivors and victims of gun violence, like myself, and helps them get through their situation to regain their lives. As survivors and victims know too well, depression can claim your personality if you don’t seek guidance in the right direction to help you overcome the tragedy.

I also just became an author; my new book is called Untitled: An Act of God/Act of Man. I wrote this memoir to give others the encouragement and strength they need to overcome life-changing events. In the book, I attempt to explain the pain I have suffered. But I want this book to be something that when you’re feeling down and out, you can pick it up, read about the things I faced and how I am trying to shed light on a dark situation, and realize that your life could be worse than what it is.

I like to fish and canoe. My father was an avid fisherman; that is how we really did our bonding and would catch up on what was going on with each other. I also like giving back and helping out others in the community or anywhere across the country.


Tell us a little about your father. What was he like?

My father, Derrick Fudge, was a stern man when I was growing up, but as I got older he became a friend. Like all fathers and sons, we argued over things. Now, I wish I had the chance to argue with him about something.

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My dad was a kind-hearted person. He would do anything to help someone, even if he did not know you. He was a faithful bell ringer for the Salvation Army, and everyone loved him. That’s why last year I stood in place for him, ringing the bell and fulfilling his duty since he was not here.

My dad was a big kid. All the grandchildren loved him because he was a kid himself around them. He loved the Pittsburgh Steelers football team and loved to fish. He lived a simple life, but it was enough for him.


What happened that night in Dayton?

August 4, 2019 started out as a great day because I went canoeing. I had not been out of the house since May, because my home was hit by the tornadoes that ravaged the city of Dayton. I decided to go canoeing on the Mad River in Springfield just to feel alive again, and I had a great time.

After leaving the river, I went to my mother’s house in Springfield to hang out with my family, because I hadn’t seen them since before the tornadoes. I offered for my friends and family to come back to Dayton to go out that evening. Everyone came to my house before we headed to the Oregon District.

As we made our way to the Oregon District, my dad fell asleep. I told him to stay in the car, that we would only be there for a short period of time. But he said he was coming too.

We went into Newcom’s, and as soon as we get inside my dad is up there dancing and having a blast. At one point, a security guard came up to us saying that we had to leave because my dad was dancing inappropriately. I have the video, and he was definitely “social-distance” dancing. Since I was tired anyway, we decided to leave. Once outside, we stood by the taco stand waiting on my sister and her boyfriend to come out.

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Right in that moment, my night went from having a blast to the worst night of my life. While standing there waiting for my sister, a tall slender white man came walking down the side of the building wearing a mask and a body armor suit. As he entered the sidewalk, he let off a couple of rounds. I just knew this was not real, because the Oregon District is heavily guarded with police officers. I thought maybe he was just acting stupid.

It was no joke. After he came out shooting, he walked in between the cars. Me, my dad, and my girlfriend were still standing. Nobody was hurt. Then, as he crossed the street, the gun shots were non-stop and people began to panic and take cover. I still thought, this is not real. He walked right by me, and no one was hurt.

While people were running and screaming, I’m telling my dad to get up so we could get out of there. Reality kicked in when the person in front of me asked me to call the police because they had been shot. I tried calling, but all lines were busy. I went back to my dad saying, “Get up man. We are out of here.” But he just kept lying there with his eyes open, breathing like a fish out of water.

When I looked at him the first time, I didn’t see any blood. I turned on the flashlight on my phone, and everything looked fine until I got up to his head and shoulders, and I saw that he was lying in a puddleof blood. That’s when I lost all feeling and broke down. I started performing CPR and saying, “Get up dad”, but I could tell he was slowly leaving me. So, I just hugged him and kept saying, “I love you, dad. Please get up. I love you. Please get up.”

But he didn’t get up. And I just lost control of my life and everything around me in that moment.


How have you responded to grief?

I am still dealing with it. I seek help professionally and I talk to others close to me. Talking about it is a form of therapy for me. Sometimes I can speak about it, and some days I can’t.


What do you want the average American to understand about your story? 

First, that mental health is a major issue. If conditions are left untreated, and a person is not seeking help, it can lead to something devastating, and you can be left facing the challenges I am going through.

Also, that life is not promised, so please make right with your loved ones and friends because not one minute is guaranteed.

Mental health issues and guns are not a good combination; it’s a recipe for disaster.


What do you want elected officials to understand about your story?

I’m not a politician, but I want better guidelines on where guns like these are being sold and who they’re being sold to, so we can prevent these events from happening to others around the country.