A Parkland school shooting survivor died Monday after a yearslong mental health battle following the mass shooting at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School in 2018.
Donovan Joshua Leigh Metayer, who was a senior at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School when a shooter killed 17 people and injured 18 others, died by suicide Monday after what his family called a “years-long battle with schizophrenia.” He was 26.
According to a GoFundMe set up by Metayer’s family, Metayer began to withdraw after the mass shooting and dealt with “depression, guilt, emotional instability, and long periods of isolation.”
“The trauma of that day and the loss of classmates lingered long after graduation and profoundly altered the course of his life.”
Metayer was hospitalized for suicidal ideation several times throughout the years. “He struggled to accept a mental health diagnosis,” the GoFundMe reads. “Treatment—therapy, medication, and constant adjustments—was a journey marked by exhaustion. Donny often masked his pain to not burden those he loved, even as our family fought alongside him. Finding care through limited resources, systemic barriers, and the realities of navigating mental health crises as a young Black man made his path all the more steep.”




Israeli occupation forces and illegal paramilitary Israeli colonizers carried out widespread violations across the occupied West Bank on Saturday, including home invasions, abductions, shootings, among them the killing of two Palestinians, including a child, road attacks, and coordinated colonizer assaults on Palestinian towns and villages.
Sven Lilienström, founder of the Faces of Democracy initiative, spoke via Zoom with Ukrainian human rights activist and Nobel Peace Prize laureate Oleksandra Matviichuk (42) about the humanitarian crisis in eastern Ukraine, the red lines in peace negotiations, and whether a world led predominantly by women would be a better one.
On Thursday evening, as rumors about the Brown University gunman swirled, CNN’s Kaitlan Collins posted on social media, noting the confusion and directing people to her network’s 9pm newscast.
Dollar General, the retail giant that promises “convenience, quality brands and low prices”, has agreed to pay at least $15m to settle claims that it overcharged customers at many of its 20,000 US stores.





























