fpb: (The credible Hulk)
fpb ([personal profile] fpb) wrote2013-07-18 07:33 pm

YOUR HIGHER MORALITY

Well, I suppose all my friends are right. We do need Zimmerman lynched. We are in need of a lynch mob unleashed by short and fraudulent media summaries to rip a man who has been judged innocent by a jury of his peers and hang him on a tree on the reports of MNBC and the rest. Because journalists never would lie and always understand everything that is going on, and are in fact fountains of virtue and sagacity, and we may confidently hate those whom they tell us to hate; whereas the jury that has spent weeks being exposed in detail to everything that could be retrieved of the facts are too stupid, ignorant and racist to make the right choice. We need more demos. We need more shouting. We need more threats.

[identity profile] fpb.livejournal.com 2013-07-19 01:28 am (UTC)(link)
I heard everything you mention. Actually, I have a suspicion that the local police, thought they knew perfectly well that Zimmerman was no more guilty than the man in the moon, may well have been pleased to help the prosecutors because they remembered him from when he had taken a very vocal part in the campaign that had forced a previous police head to resign, only a year before.

[identity profile] ravenclaw-eric.livejournal.com 2013-07-19 01:52 am (UTC)(link)
That makes the whole thing stink even more.

If this goes on, I might as well move to the Norfolk Fens.

[identity profile] fpb.livejournal.com 2013-07-19 07:36 am (UTC)(link)
Don't bother. The British police is as corrupt and the PC instinct even more primary.

[identity profile] affablestranger.livejournal.com 2013-07-19 02:53 am (UTC)(link)
The original local police on the case (the detectives and the chief) didn't believe there was anything to arrest Zimmerman for, according to various accounts that came to light during the trial. It wasn't until sociopolitical pressure was brought to bear - and new personnel were brought in on the case - that he was arrested and prosecuted. Most legal analysts have expressed the opinion that murder charges were almost certainly never going to be made to stick, a notion reinforced by the last-minute decision to tell the jury that manslaughter could also be considered. By trial's end, I wager, it was too late for that. The state blew its wad on second-degree murder, and even they figure the odds were strong it was a loser. I truly believe they always knew but felt that had to "do" something.

The United States of America is deeply fractured. It doesn't help that it, with the willing and eager help of the Democratic and Republican parties and the press, is addicted to outrage orgasms. There are a large number of people, white and non-white, that want Zimmerman made an example of, for him to be punished not only for his crime but also for the crimes of others they believe, rightly or wrongly, "got away with it." And there are a large number of people, mostly white, who are actually happy that Trayvon Martin is dead and violently because of what they feel he represented: a young black male criminal-in-training. I've not only read posts and essays by members of both groups. I've listened to them in conversation. I've not had one with any of them because, frankly, there is no such thing allowed. Either "Zimmerman is a hateful, racist monster who got away with murdering an child" or "Martin, that little thug-wannabe who was probably going to be living off the taxpayer dime in prison in a few years anyway, deserved that bullet." And a lot of people speak of it all as if they wish that either they could throw the switch on Zimmerman or could have shot Martin themselves. It's not going to get any better any time soon, I fear.

[identity profile] fpb.livejournal.com 2013-07-19 04:37 am (UTC)(link)
My own experience of having the Politically Correct hounds of Hell unleashed against me by people in power (specifically, university authorities) leads me to feel strong sympathy with Zimmerman, who has done nothing wrong that I can see. Of course, being no fan of gun nuts and lynch mobs, I am not going to jump up and down at the waste of a life that began long before Martin ran into that bullet. I hate the thought of - as Dickens wonderfully put it - "...children...generated in great numbers for certain destruction... imprisoned, whipped, transported, neglected, cast out, qualified in all ways for the hangman, and growing up to be hanged... so much spawn, to develop into the fish that were to come to his net,—to be prosecuted, defended, forsworn, made orphans, bedevilled somehow," (Great Expectations, ch.51)
Edited 2013-07-19 04:41 (UTC)

[identity profile] jsl32.livejournal.com 2013-07-19 05:00 am (UTC)(link)
Zimmerman was a sweet (black) man (if my own children are black, which they are) who cared about his community and his neighbors greatly and ended up fearing for his life one night and made a moment's decision to save his own life.

Martin was a silly young man who might have grown out of his stupidity, but we'll never know, because he had to face the consequences for it in a very direct way.

That is what I see in the evidence available to us non-jury members and it's greatly distressing to me that black people didn't get behind the other black guy in that fight.

[identity profile] fpb.livejournal.com 2013-07-19 06:40 am (UTC)(link)
Well, I hope some do... If you look at the company any real protester would find himself in, perhaps that would be enough to make them think again. The latest news is that "protesters" either have looted or are trying to loot a Wal-Mart. Interesting way to protest, that.