Author Topic: Zimmerman Found Not Guilty  (Read 139576 times)

Cheshire Cat

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Re: Zimmerman Found Not Guilty
« Reply #390 on: July 16, 2013, 06:27:41 PM »
What is literally sickening is that people seem to think this is an opportunity for them to decide whether or not the dead child was a 'good' person.

This is the problem with this kind of nonsense.  It puts people in the position of passing judgement on the actual 'value' of the life of this child rather than on the circumstances of the murder.

If it turned out that Trayvon was a bad person, would it be ok to attack and then murder him?

Really?

And then who would be the judge of whether or not a persons life was worth getting worked up about?

Thats the literal opposite of rule by Law.
Unfortunately Stephen there are people who are prone to blame or judge in this manner.  It reminds me of so many cases where a woman is assaulted or raped and then finds her character attacked and victimized all over again.  I hear you loud and clear.

Yes.  Its unbelievable, really.

Everyone feels entitled until it happens to one of their own.

A couple of the comments on this thread have literally sickened me.  Especially the ones along the lines of 'people are portraying the 17 year old as some kind of 'good' person....'

Shame.  Seriously, Shame.  To my mind its the sign of someone who has completely lost their moral compass.
Agreed.  Did you mean to say portraying a 17 year old as a bad person?   Trayvon was pretty much an average kid making pretty average mistakes, i.e. his school suspension which has happened to many people in their youth and today.  Not to mention messing with weed.  I grew up in the sixties and frankly almost everyone I knew would be losers today if we were to question their use of MJ, including those who didn't inhale.  lol

Cheshire Cat

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Re: Zimmerman Found Not Guilty
« Reply #391 on: July 16, 2013, 06:33:22 PM »
Seems like the poor actual victim (especially viewed from their perspective of the same situation) literally has no right to defend themselves.  That should be a concern with the interpretation of such policies as described.

Do you think its ok that "victim" threw the first punch? Should that not come into play, thus calling into question the character of the victim?

If you were in this situation, would you have gone home and called the police, or would you have confronted, and attacked the person following you, without regard to if that person is armed or not?

I am not asking this as a legal question. This is a question of common sense and self preservation.

Demo, I know you were speaking to Stephen.  I hope you don't mind me chiming in on the issue of the first punch thrown.  Trayvon was a 17 year old boy who was at the age when they are raging with testosterone and trying to define their prowess as a man.  I know this because I have two sons.  The combination of maturity (i.e. he's a kid), hormones and fear are understandable and likely the reason he did what he did.  I don't condone it but I sure as heck can understand it.  Just think of yourself as a teenager.  If there is not a list of things you did or said that you should not have and that in fact were potentially dangerous you may be an angel.  Remember that kids don't think things through when excited and that's the reality for Trayvon I believe.
« Last Edit: July 16, 2013, 06:36:02 PM by Cheshire Cat »

MEGATRON

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Re: Zimmerman Found Not Guilty
« Reply #392 on: July 16, 2013, 09:00:33 PM »
Agreed.  Did you mean to say portraying a 17 year old as a bad person?   Trayvon was pretty much an average kid making pretty average mistakes, i.e. his school suspension which has happened to many people in their youth and today.  Not to mention messing with weed.  I grew up in the sixties and frankly almost everyone I knew would be losers today if we were to question their use of MJ, including those who didn't inhale.  lol
While his character was not an issue in the trial (nor should it have been as Zimmerman was not aware of it), painting Martin as an average kid is a little untruthful.  He may have not been a bad seed but he was not far from it.  Again, that does not matter ultimately.

peestandingup

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Re: Trayvon Martin Case plus related discussion of Law and Racism
« Reply #393 on: July 16, 2013, 09:02:26 PM »
GZ/TM is a non-story if GZ is locked away behind bars for manslaughter.  He's no different from the drunk driver doing time for killing an innocent pedestrian or someone on the Southside of Chicago getting arrested for murder. Right or wrong, the way things went down (jury finds killer not guilty), makes it another sad chapter in what one segment of the population deems as a list of injustices (especially, since the Florida law allows such an event to legally take place).  Just goes to show, things aren't all peaches and cream despite some trying to paint our picture in that light.

I see your point, but I still think most aren't concentrating on the relevant issues. And let's not kid ourselves. You & I both know there are TONS of these very same injustices when it comes to black on black crime. They may not be televised, except for a small on air mention or blurb in a paper somewhere, but they're there & it ends up being another forgotten statistic. No outcry, no protests, no bumper stickers, no network news channels milking it for everything's its worth. Nothing.

So I think we all need to stop pretending this wasn't people taking the race bait & running with it.

thelakelander

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Re: Zimmerman Found Not Guilty
« Reply #394 on: July 16, 2013, 09:07:22 PM »
Seems like the poor actual victim (especially viewed from their perspective of the same situation) literally has no right to defend themselves.  That should be a concern with the interpretation of such policies as described.

Do you think its ok that "victim" threw the first punch? Should that not come into play, thus calling into question the character of the victim?

If you were in this situation, would you have gone home and called the police, or would you have confronted, and attacked the person following you, without regard to if that person is armed or not?

I am not asking this as a legal question. This is a question of common
ense and self preservation.


You'd be a prime candidate to get mugged or get your entire family shot up.  When looking from the victim's perspective of the situation, the story line would go something like this:

1. It's dark and raining and some creepy guy is obviously following me.  I'm going to speed up (this is validated in the conversation with the girlfriend and GZ's 911 call of the victim starting to run).

2. You've increased your speed and creepy guy who you don't know continues in pursuit of you.  Creepy guy is obviously going to attempt to rob me.

3. For those who say run home and call 911, why would you want to show the mugger where you live and expose them to your little brother who's at home alone?  If creepy mugger guy is in hot pursuit of you, what good is it going to do you then to call 911, when dude is obviously seconds away?

4. You need to make a split decision here to keep from being mugged by creepy guy (remember, TM has no idea that GZ is over zealous neighborhood vigilante). You don't want creepy guy following you all the way home and you don't want him to catch up to you from behind and catch you off guard.

In this situation, you are provoked and in fear.  One of your logical options is to go on the defensive and attempt to turn the tables on creepy mugger guy by fighting for your life. With that said, no one has a real idea of who threw the first punch (doesn't mean it had to land), what was said, etc. during that physical confrontation except GZ.  Everything else is educated guesses and assumptions.  All we really know is TM was a better fighter than GZ, causing GZ (in fear of course) shot the victim in self defense of a situation GZ initiated.

With that being said, the flawed part on TM's decision to fight for his life, instead of letting the mugger attack him at home (remember GZ obviously up to no good from the victim's perspective), is that people legally pack heat these days.  Back in the old days, GZ would have taken a good whipping, but both would have lived and moved on. These days a lot of crazy people can legally pack heat, shot you for conflicts they generate and legally get away with it, if the victim starts getting the best of them.

thelakelander

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Re: Zimmerman Found Not Guilty
« Reply #395 on: July 16, 2013, 09:10:17 PM »
Agreed.  Did you mean to say portraying a 17 year old as a bad person?   Trayvon was pretty much an average kid making pretty average mistakes, i.e. his school suspension which has happened to many people in their youth and today.  Not to mention messing with weed.  I grew up in the sixties and frankly almost everyone I knew would be losers today if we were to question their use of MJ, including those who didn't inhale.  lol
While his character was not an issue in the trial (nor should it have been as Zimmerman was not aware of it), painting Martin as an average kid is a little untruthful.  He may have not been a bad seed but he was not far from it.  Again, that does not matter ultimately.

Go sleep with a 17-year-old girl in this state and see what happens to you. He was an average kid. Nothing has been presented to suggest otherwise.


Cheshire Cat

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Re: Zimmerman Found Not Guilty
« Reply #396 on: July 16, 2013, 09:11:40 PM »
Agreed.  Did you mean to say portraying a 17 year old as a bad person?   Trayvon was pretty much an average kid making pretty average mistakes, i.e. his school suspension which has happened to many people in their youth and today.  Not to mention messing with weed.  I grew up in the sixties and frankly almost everyone I knew would be losers today if we were to question their use of MJ, including those who didn't inhale.  lol
While his character was not an issue in the trial (nor should it have been as Zimmerman was not aware of it), painting Martin as an average kid is a little untruthful.  He may have not been a bad seed but he was not far from it.  Again, that does not matter ultimately.
Agree about the background being unimportant to Zimmerman but do you have information that the rest of the world doesn't that Trayvon was not far from being a bad seed as opposed to kid acting out?  (I always feel compelled to put a disclaimer that this is not a challenge, just wanting to know the basis by which you came to you conclusion about his character.)

On another note, there will be a civil trial as such all of the issues of background and character will come out with regard to both Zimmerman and Trayvon. 
« Last Edit: July 16, 2013, 09:25:08 PM by Cheshire Cat »

sheclown

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Re: Zimmerman Found Not Guilty
« Reply #397 on: July 16, 2013, 09:12:58 PM »
Agreed.  Did you mean to say portraying a 17 year old as a bad person?   Trayvon was pretty much an average kid making pretty average mistakes, i.e. his school suspension which has happened to many people in their youth and today.  Not to mention messing with weed.  I grew up in the sixties and frankly almost everyone I knew would be losers today if we were to question their use of MJ, including those who didn't inhale.  lol
While his character was not an issue in the trial (nor should it have been as Zimmerman was not aware of it), painting Martin as an average kid is a little untruthful.  He may have not been a bad seed but he was not far from it.  Again, that does not matter ultimately.

Go sleep with a 17-year-old girl in this state and see what happens to you. He was an average kid. Nothing has been presented to suggest otherwise.



+1

thelakelander

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Re: Zimmerman Found Not Guilty
« Reply #398 on: July 16, 2013, 09:18:26 PM »
George Zimmerman has been found Not Guilty what has to happen to George for YOU to move on?

For you guys to stop vilifying the deceased.  He didn't deserve what happened to him and it wasn't his fault GZ started the chain of events that led to his death.  The rest (the real life cases and fallout to come) will happen on their own as the issue runs its course through the system.

Cheshire Cat

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Re: Zimmerman Found Not Guilty
« Reply #399 on: July 16, 2013, 09:19:53 PM »
Seems like the poor actual victim (especially viewed from their perspective of the same situation) literally has no right to defend themselves.  That should be a concern with the interpretation of such policies as described.

Do you think its ok that "victim" threw the first punch? Should that not come into play, thus calling into question the character of the victim?

If you were in this situation, would you have gone home and called the police, or would you have confronted, and attacked the person following you, without regard to if that person is armed or not?

I am not asking this as a legal question. This is a question of common
ense and self preservation.


You'd be a prime candidate to get mugged or get your entire family shot up.  When looking from the victim's perspective of the situation, the story line would go something like this:

1. It's dark and raining and some creepy guy is obviously following me.  I'm going to speed up (this is validated in the conversation with the girlfriend and GZ's 911 call of the victim starting to run).

2. You've increased your speed and creepy guy who you don't know continues in pursuit of you.  Creepy guy is obviously going to attempt to rob me.

3. For those who say run home and call 911, why would you want to show the mugger where you live and expose them to your little brother who's at home alone?  If creepy mugger guy is in hot pursuit of you, what good is it going to do you then to call 911, when dude is obviously seconds away?

4. You need to make a split decision here to keep from being mugged by creepy guy (remember, TM has no idea that GZ is over zealous neighborhood vigilante). You don't want creepy guy following you all the way home and you don't want him to catch up to you from behind and catch you off guard.

In this situation, you are provoked and in fear.  One of your logical options is to go on the defensive and attempt to turn the tables on creepy mugger guy by fighting for your life. With that said, no one has a real idea of who threw the first punch (doesn't mean it had to land), what was said, etc. during that physical confrontation except GZ.  Everything else is educated guesses and assumptions.  All we really know is TM was a better fighter than GZ, causing GZ (in fear of course) shot the victim in self defense of a situation GZ initiated.

With that being said, the flawed part on TM's decision to fight for his life, instead of letting the mugger attack him at home (remember GZ obviously up to no good from the victim's perspective), is that people legally pack heat these days.  Back in the old days, GZ would have taken a good whipping, but both would have lived and moved on. These days a lot of crazy people can legally pack heat, shot you for conflicts they generate and legally get away with it, if the victim starts getting the best of them.
The young lady was on CNN last night on one of their evening programs.  She said she had suggested to Trayvon that the guy following him was likely a rapist which is why he ran.
Seems like the poor actual victim (especially viewed from their perspective of the same situation) literally has no right to defend themselves.  That should be a concern with the interpretation of such policies as described.

Do you think its ok that "victim" threw the first punch? Should that not come into play, thus calling into question the character of the victim?

If you were in this situation, would you have gone home and called the police, or would you have confronted, and attacked the person following you, without regard to if that person is armed or not?

I am not asking this as a legal question. This is a question of common
ense and self preservation.


You'd be a prime candidate to get mugged or get your entire family shot up.  When looking from the victim's perspective of the situation, the story line would go something like this:

1. It's dark and raining and some creepy guy is obviously following me.  I'm going to speed up (this is validated in the conversation with the girlfriend and GZ's 911 call of the victim starting to run).

2. You've increased your speed and creepy guy who you don't know continues in pursuit of you.  Creepy guy is obviously going to attempt to rob me.

3. For those who say run home and call 911, why would you want to show the mugger where you live and expose them to your little brother who's at home alone?  If creepy mugger guy is in hot pursuit of you, what good is it going to do you then to call 911, when dude is obviously seconds away?

4. You need to make a split decision here to keep from being mugged by creepy guy (remember, TM has no idea that GZ is over zealous neighborhood vigilante). You don't want creepy guy following you all the way home and you don't want him to catch up to you from behind and catch you off guard.

In this situation, you are provoked and in fear.  One of your logical options is to go on the defensive and attempt to turn the tables on creepy mugger guy by fighting for your life. With that said, no one has a real idea of who threw the first punch (doesn't mean it had to land), what was said, etc. during that physical confrontation except GZ.  Everything else is educated guesses and assumptions.  All we really know is TM was a better fighter than GZ, causing GZ (in fear of course) shot the victim in self defense of a situation GZ initiated.

With that being said, the flawed part on TM's decision to fight for his life, instead of letting the mugger attack him at home (remember GZ obviously up to no good from the victim's perspective), is that people legally pack heat these days.  Back in the old days, GZ would have taken a good whipping, but both would have lived and moved on. These days a lot of crazy people can legally pack heat, shot you for conflicts they generate and legally get away with it, if the victim starts getting the best of them.
George Zimmerman has been found Not Guilty what has to happen to George for YOU to move on?
Because this is a conversation to get underneath why this case has gotten the attention it has.  Only by hearing everyone's perspectives and talking them through can we begin to understand why some see this as connected to race and others don't.  It's important for society to understand so that we can change laws, idea's and whatever else we need to evolve above.  Many people are trying to come to terms with what all of this means I do believe.

thelakelander

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Re: Trayvon Martin Case plus related discussion of Law and Racism
« Reply #400 on: July 16, 2013, 09:23:54 PM »
^Same for white on white crime. Small blurbs here or there but no protests, bumper stickers, networks and news channels.   

In both situations and others, people typically end up being arrested.  The only reason this particular issue is all over news channels and really going mainstream is that the guy who started and ended the entire thing legally walked.  That's the major difference from typical shootings, killings, etc. (regardless of race) where the murder is identified and tried in court.

Unfortunately, sometimes it takes events like this to get discussion going on the larger issue at hand.  Just look at MJ the past few days.  Everyone knows Jax is a city struggling with racial divide.  Yet we've never really dived into it on this forum.  Now there's rapidly growing threads on similar topics all over this site.
« Last Edit: July 16, 2013, 09:27:20 PM by thelakelander »

sheclown

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Re: Zimmerman Found Not Guilty
« Reply #401 on: July 16, 2013, 09:25:06 PM »
If we cannot see the role racism played in this -- if we are unwilling to talk about it due to denial or discomfort -- we stand ZERO chance of making significant change and, ultimately,  will play out the same scenario until the end of our days.

peestandingup

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Re: Trayvon Martin Case plus related discussion of Law and Racism
« Reply #402 on: July 16, 2013, 09:59:45 PM »
^Same for white on white crime. Small blurbs here or there but no protests, bumper stickers, networks and news channels.   

In both situations and others, people typically end up being arrested.  The only reason this particular issue is all over news channels and really going mainstream is that the guy who started and ended the entire thing legally walked.  That's the major difference from typical shootings, killings, etc. (regardless of race) where the murder is identified and tried in court.

Unfortunately, sometimes it takes events like this to get discussion going on the larger issue at hand.  Just look at MJ the past few days.  Everyone knows Jax is a city struggling with racial divide.  Yet we've never really dived into it on this forum.  Now there's rapidly growing threads on similar topics all over this site.

Of course. So what does it all mean? That we're all looking out for our "own kind" only if a member of the "other kind" kills one of "ours"?? And that the media only pushes forward these juicy stories, while leaving others in the dust, because they know we'll all lap it up?? I don't know. But like we both said, there's bigger things at play here that I honestly don't think the general population is really talking about, or even acknowledging.

sheclown

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Re: Zimmerman Found Not Guilty
« Reply #403 on: July 16, 2013, 10:02:56 PM »
How can there be "moving on?"  It is inconceivable.

Cheshire Cat

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Re: Zimmerman Found Not Guilty
« Reply #404 on: July 16, 2013, 10:13:17 PM »
Gloria, can you share why it is your view this is all about race and that those who refuse to draw the same conclusion are in denial or discomfort?  What in your mind makes you sure that race was the driving factor in the unfortunate incident that ended with the death of Trayvon?
« Last Edit: July 16, 2013, 10:23:28 PM by Cheshire Cat »