Tuesday, July 9, 2013

The Real Meaning of the Zimmerman Trial

Jelani Cobb:
The answers to these questions have bearing that is more social than legal, but they’re inescapable in understanding how we got here in the first place and what this trial ultimately means. George Zimmerman got out of his car that night as an amateur deputy and protector of the Retreat at Twin Lakes gated community. Trayvon Martin was a visitor to that community. Nowhere in Zimmerman’s initial emergency call does he broach the idea that Martin might belong there, that he might actually be someone who warranted protection, too. Instead, there is the snap judgment that the teen-ager is one of the “fucking punks” who “always get away”—a judgment that Zimmerman’s supporters and the Sanford Police Department either co-signed or deemed reasonable enough to absolve him of responsibility for what ensued.
What remains frustratingly marginal in this discussion is the point Martin’s friend Rachel Jeantel raised in her testimony—that Martin himself was afraid, that a black person might assess a man following him in a car and on foot as a threat, never mind that he might have seen Zimmerman’s weapon and suspected his life was in danger. The defense paid a great deal of attention to the implications of Martin referring to Zimmerman as a “creepy-ass cracker,” but, to the extent that we think about the epithet, we’re concerned with the wrong C-word. Imagine George Zimmerman being followed at night, in the rain, by an armed, unknown black man and you have an encounter that far exceeds the minimal definition of “creepy.” Indeed, you have a circumstance in which anyone would reasonably fear for his life. Add a twist in which that black man fires a shot that ends a person’s life, and it’s hard to imagine him going home after a brief police interview, as Zimmerman did.
He may get acquitted, but George Zimmerman is a jackass and an idiot.  And Florida's Stand Your Ground law is absolutely idiotic clearance for murder as justified homicide.  It could be also known as the Make Sure He's Dead law. Well, if nothing else, this will probably bring my racist troll in to say that all blacks are scary racists who should be shot.

2 comments:

  1. http://www.allvoices.com/contributed-news/14952214-blacks-are-more-racist-than-whites-poll

    Good read. Not exactly unexpected.

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  2. I'm sure it isn't, for you. Have you ever given consideration to the fact that black people might have a grudge against white people because they don't think slavery was a very good deal?

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