EAllusion wrote:It's become impossible to be aware of the news and not aware of the minute details of this trial, so for what it is worth, I would vote to convict Zimmerman of a manslaughter charge, but not murder. I think some of the details are sufficiently murky that there is reasonable doubt of the criteria needed to be out and out murder.
I am sympathetic to some skepticism in what initially looked like could become a media-fueled witch hunt of Zimmerman, but I think the facts of the case clearly demonstrate Zimmerman acted unlawfully to create the circumstances that caused Martin's death.
I don't think everyone appreciates the extent to which African-Americans are profiled and live under a quasi-police state in huge swathes of the United States and how this reality has created a great deal of resentment that can be projected into this case. Zimmerman regarded Martin - an innocent teenager getting some skittles - as suspicious and worthy of following. There is no indication whatsoever Martin was doing anything suspicious and its hard to imagine how racial stereotyping of Martin's look and cohort did not play a role in that judgment.
While I am sympathetic to some reasoned skepticism of convicting Zimmerman, I am absolutely appalled by the extent to which outright racist reasoning has informed right-wing media commentary on this trial, even in sources that are mainstream by conservative media standards. That is stoking the fires of racial resentment. That doesn't justify any violent response if Zimmerman is acquitted, but it certainly is contributing to a tense atmosphere surrounding the verdict.
I heard a commentator this morning (I think it was on George Stephanopolis's show on ABC) observe that there were two facets to the Zimmerman trial: the "larger" issues of race and profiling, and the specific details of what happened that night.
Trayvon Martin getting killed is an admittedly awful situation any way you look at it. The issues of profiling, race and "justice" are also important ones. But he noted (as a correspondent who had watched ever second of the trial) that when you actually looked at the Zimmerman situation and what happened (and what they said happened, and the evidence shown etc.), there just wasn't enough there to support a conviction.
So, if that's true, the jury did what they were supposed to and made the best call they could. Our justice system is obviously imperfect, and there's never a guarantee that a jury trial will result in a "just" decision based on our cosmic sense of right and wrong with every factor considered.
Hopefully, to the degree that justice has not been served, this will result in changes that will improve the situation for next time (like changing laws about the appropriate use of deadly force?)