“This year you focused on one of the most important of [James] Madison’s amendments, the Second Amendment,” Keene said to the rows of empty chairs. “There are some who will continue to fight to gut the Second Amendment, but I’d be willing to bet that many of you will be among those who stand up and prevent them from succeeding.”
“An overwhelming majority of you will go on to college, while others may decide their dream dictates a different route to success,” he added. “So my advice to you is simple enough: follow your dream and make it a reality.”
CNN has reached out to the NRA and Keene for comment, but has not yet received a response.
They included the speech in a three-part video series titled “Lost Class,” which also featured footage of the empty chairs, audio of 911 calls made by students, and the sound of guns being fired.
Keene wasn’t the only person the organization tricked into participating in the fake graduation.
John Lott, author and gun rights activist, also addressed the audience of empty chairs. Lott’s book “More Guns, Less Crime” is often referred to as the NRA’s “bible,” the video says.
In a statement to CNN, Lott said he did not want his commencement speech to be political or about gun control, but was asked to do so by the event organizers. He also accused Change the Ref of editing his speech.
“They should make the entire video public so that people can see how they deceptively edited my talk, taking not even a minute of a 15 minute talk,” he told CNN.
“I have dedicated years of my life to try to prevent school shootings.” Lott said. He told CNN he talked about “how to fix the system” and “how to make it work,” and how gun control advocates are fighting against his ideas, but he said the organization edited it out.
Lott, who drove 1,000 miles from Montana to Las Vegas, to give the speech has demanded that Change the Ref releases the full video.
Manuel Oliver told CNN that “there was no editing.”
“They said the speech. Those are their words. They believe that,” he said.
“This is what these guys believe and what we did was call it out and put it out there so everyone knows,” he added.
Manuel Oliver said the stunt was less about them and more about the students who were killed and therefore will not graduate this year.
“They might be mad. They might feel like fools,” he said. “Honestly, it’s not about them. It’s about the 3,044 chairs that were missing a student because of gun violence, and those two guys are part of the problem and they are far away from being part of the solution.”