Hopwin wrote:
Shooting someone assaulting you = legit self-defense
Provoking someone into assualting you out of fear so that you can shoot them in "self-defense" is bullshit.
Zimmerman should've stayed in his truck and minded his own **** business after notifying the police. He should've been charged with and convicted of manslaughter.
No, he shouldn't have. Following someone is not "provokign them into assaulting you."
Get this through your head. You don't have a right for people not to follow, observe, videotape, cell phone record, listen to, or otherwise make themselves of what you are doing when in public. That isn't a provocation in and of itself. Other things they might do in the process, such as taunt or harass you might be, but Zimmerman did not do any of those things. Furthermore, if you think someone is overstepping their bounds you can CALL THE POLICE YOURSELF. Trayvon Martin, despite having a phone, notably did not do so, even though "There is a man following me for no apparent reason" is something the police would no doubt have responded to.
Quote:
And yes my reason for this is the completely selfish belief that no one has a right to invade what I believe myself, personally to be my privacy. As DE and I went through before, the government has no right to my business, nor does a private citizen, unless I am actively engaged in a criminal act.
It doesn't matter what you yourself think the limits of your privacy are. Society decides that, so that its the same for everyone.
Anyone has a right to observe and act on what they observe about you in public, and that includes following you and calling the police if they suspect you of engaging in criminal activity. If you don't want it observed, don't do it in public.
The justice system works on principles evolved so that everyone is treated the same, and so that people cannot use the rules as a shield for criminal activity. Rights are there to keep the innocent from being wrongly
convicted, not wrongly
suspected. They are also not there as a shield for criminals to use to evade consequences.