Well, it's not very surprising in view of the fact that
this nonsense is what's being said by black journalists who are probably not in the NBPP.
A few gems:
Quote:
"This case is a perfect storm," says Xavier Donaldson, a defense attorney and former prosecutor in New York. "You have to look at the nature of the case and the racial, political and social economics of the defendant and accused. You have a young black kid, walking with a sweatshirt on and some guy, who wants to be a cop, assumes he's a criminal and shoots him dead." Zimmerman has pleaded not guilty to second-degree murder.
Yes, that's what you get when we start worrying about "racial, political, and social economics" instead of.. the facts. A total disregard of the circumstances in favor of only the aspects that make it look like some sort of out-of-the-blue execution. Or, we could stop letting people appeal to "racial, political, and social economics" they're just assuming in the first place.
Code:
"Zimmerman had an image in his community as a good guy, who wanted to protect people. So he -- and not Martin, the victim -- has gotten the benefit of presumption of innocence. Normally, in murder cases that doesn't happen. People generally believe that if you've been arrested and charged that you must have done something wrong, but those lines are blurred here," says Donaldson.
So, you're complaining that someone on trial
is being regarded as innocent until proven guilty? Why would we grant that to the "victim", when they aren't even on trial?
Quote:
It seems Zimmerman, in part because he belonged to his neighborhood watch group, has been granted the status of a police officer.
No, it really doesn't seem that way at all.
Quote:
Words matter, as we have seen over the course of the trial. So when Mantei told the court before resting his case: "There are two people involved here. One of them is dead, and one of them is a liar," I was shocked.
This is a murder case. One person is dead, and the other person is a murderer. Those words more accurately describe the facts presented in the case. There is no question that Zimmerman killed Martin, so there's no reason to tiptoe around the words.
No reason other than the fact that legal homicides are not murder, and Zimmerman has not been convicted you mean.
Quote:
But I do know one thing: We should not have to wear a Trayvon T-shirt to an awards show or attend a pep rally to remind America that when an unarmed child is confronted and gunned down in the street by a grown man who's trained to kill, that's murder. End of story.
Where exactly did Zimmerman get "trained to kill"? How did he "Gun him down in the streets?" But she is, sort of, right. You shouldn't have to wear those shirts. And here's the cool part - you don't have to wear those shirts, because the case basically bears no resemblance to the way you're thinking about it.
This sums up the entire controversy in this case - Because Martin was unarmed, a teenager, and black, for many people, and probably the vast majority of blacks, he must have been murdered in cold blood because to admit otherwise would mean that racism really is not driving the train all the time. This case fundamentally threatens the worldview that most blacks under about 60 years old have had foisted upon them. None of the facts and circumstances matter; the only thing that matters is confirming the truth of racism - either a racist justice system that acquits Zimmerman, or a racist Zimmerman that demonstrates how whites "really" think of blacks.
Until people stop allowing claims of racism to be heard as legitimate political discourse, we won't ever get past this.