In downtown DeLand, honking horns geared-up a crowd standing on the corners of New York Avenue and Woodland Boulevard Wednesday night.

Rallies and vigils continue to pop up across Florida in response to the deadly Parkland school shooting. This group was upset over the Florida legislatures' decision to not take up a ban on semi-automatic guns and large capacity magazines.

The crowd's message was written in many different ways across signs, but generally was the same: "Enough is enough."

"I can't believe we have had two mass shootings in this state in such a short time. And they were both with assault weapons. Assault weapons are wrong. They need to be banned," said Elizabeth Camarota, rally organizer.

It should be noted that the two guns used in the Pulse nightclub attack and the Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School shooting should not be considered as assault weapons because they are semi-automatic rifles and there are differences, according to some in the gun industry.

However, Camarota knows standing on a corner and holding a sign is just a show of solidarity, the real action comes in a vote.

"Are you registered to vote?" she would ask to everyone who passed by. "It is not hard to register to vote, as I told a young man I was registering, who was sitting their saying, 'I don't know if I want to or not.' I said, 'You can argue with me for five minutes, or we can take two minutes to do this.'"

She did get the young man to register and a few others too.

Also in the crowd, there were kids too young to vote. Kids still sorting through emotions with the help of their parents.

"I asked them why somebody would do that, and they said hatred. And I agreed with them. And it was really heartbreaking to talk about with them for a little while," said Emma Holder, an eighth grade.

Holder instead took to writing her thoughts and feelings. She wrote to her local newspaper about how her excitement of going to high school is now diminished by fear.

"It was pretty hard to write, because just thinking about it, I didn't know if it was something that people wanted to hear. But then I realized, later after I finished writing it, it was something that people needed to hear," said Holder.

But the unity needed to find a solution for mass shootings remains far apart.

"That ain't going to take care of the problem," said one driver from his truck.

Other drivers supported the crowd and their signs with the honk of their horn.

Florida state Senate Republicans are working on a comprehensive gun bill that would include age limits on buying guns and other restrictions.