Lyion wrote:We'll have to disagree then. Editing a 9/11 call to make an innocent answer to a question look like an overt racist remark seems pretty bad to me.
Well sure it's bad, I agree with you. As I said, it was dishonest journalism and bad form.. but again, saying 'he looks black' wasn't even the most racist thing *I* heard him say on the call, and really it's such a non-factor (or at least it should be) at the end of the day. Hearing the dispatcher doesn't impact my view of the events that transpired. It doesn't lessen my view that Zimmerman's motives were likely racially driven, and it doesn't change that whether or not it
was racially driven is just so inconsequential when compared to the larger picture of what happened. I don't care if he has a confederate flag hanging in his living room or white robes in his closet. Don't really care if he makes it a point to meet weekly and sit around a fire singing We Shall Overcome with every black person he knows. One extreme or the other or somewhere in the middle, he still shot and killed an unarmed--and underage--person, and that's what matters here.
I've tried putting myself in the shoes of both parties, and no matter how many times I do it I can't ever understand how Zimmerman came to the conclusion of such an extreme resolution to whatever problem there may have been.
Taking race completely out of the equation.. if I was being followed, I just might reach a point where I turn around and snap and start wailing on someone. People respond differently when they feel threatened, and being followed certainly feels threatening to most people. Worst case scenario, Trayvon was a total dick of a kid and
was casing houses... worst case scenario, after being followed he provokes Zimmerman into confrontation and then beats the snot out of him. So worst case, he's not exactly a model human being and will eventually find himself in a jumpsuit... and still, he was unarmed, so even if he was a total pile of shit in this situation
he is the victim.
But.. if I was a neighborhood watch captain wary of the crime rate and nervous about someone I thought was suspicious, there's simply
no scenario that would make me defy all logic, common sense, or basic knowledge that we're taught from grade school about stranger danger that would prompt me to follow someone, especially when I'd I'd already called for help, then let it escalate to the point of physical confrontation. Even if I did lose all of my common sense in the adrenaline rush of the moment, I can't possibly imagine getting to a point where I'd find the need to shoot someone who's fighting me with fists even if they're beating the shit out of me. If I'm self appointed captain of the neighborhood watch and take that post seriously, I'm at least taking some basic self defense classes if I ever think something may come to blows so that if someone starts punching my face in I can at least respond in kind and defend myself as efficiently as possible.
I just can't get on board with this guy even when I try to tell myself he's wonderful and well-intentioned and Martin was just someone who needed to be expunged from the gene pool.
crime statistics in Sanford, Florida: According to neigborhoodscout.com, Sanford has a crime index of 3 out of 100 (100 being safest), which is one of the highest crime rates in America “compared to all communities of all sizes — from the smallest towns to the very largest cities".
A 'gated' community doesn't really mean much. The security consisted of a neighborhood watch. I'll look for a citation, but there was a lot of crime reported in that area.
Well, okay, fair enough. But the whole purpose of a gated community is to offer an extra layer of security. Of course, that layer isn't invincible nor does it guarantee safety or anything like that, but usually it's a fairly safe assumption that gated communities aren't as crime-addled as their non-gated counterparts.
Honestly, I can't imagine where 3/100 comes from. I mean, of course I don't live there and I can't speak personally for their crime rate, but I live an hour and a half away.. I've been to and through Sanford several times and it's nowhere near what I'd personally think would fall in that low of a range. It's no Pleasantville, but really. 3/100 strikes would make me think of areas that Spazz and Tuggan talk about. I feel a lot safer in Sanford than I do 2 miles outside of NAS JAX on the westside of town.