Pulse 2019 Direct
But the rainbow crosswalk at the intersection remained. The 49 trees planted in the nearby park still stood. And in the hearts of a city that learned to love louder, the beat of Pulse—the bass drum of resilience—continued to pulse.
Furthermore, 2019 saw the resurgence of the "Latinx" identity in the discourse. While early media coverage focused on the "gay club," many overlooked that the club was hosting Latin Night —meaning the majority of the victims were queer Puerto Ricans and other Latin Americans. In 2019, community organizers began explicitly correcting the record, holding vigils in Spanish and pushing for intersectional gun reform. Perhaps the most haunting statistic to emerge from 2019 was the echo effect. According to a study published by the American Journal of Public Health that year, survivors of the Pulse shooting experienced PTSD at rates similar to combat veterans. But more alarmingly, researchers found that the shooting had a "contagion effect" on the mental health of LGBTQ+ people across the state. pulse 2019
That year, the U.S. government finally added the Pulse shooting to the FBI’s list of hate crime investigations. While the shooter had been killed, the designation allowed the Bureau to study the attack as a targeted act of homophobia. But the rainbow crosswalk at the intersection remained
"I was at a bar in Tampa last month, and a balloon popped," says "Marco," a 34-year-old survivor who asked to use a pseudonym. "I hit the floor. Twenty other people hit the floor. We looked at each other, and we all knew. We were reliving Pulse in a parking lot two hours away." Furthermore, 2019 saw the resurgence of the "Latinx"
In 2019, Pulse was no longer just a place. It had become a verb.