So, I came across this article where Jesse Jackson was doing an interview about the Trayvon Martin case:
http://www.latimes.com/news/nation/...n-case-jesse-jackson-20120323,0,2131299.story
It doesn't seem like he's necessarily advocating peaceful demonstrations when he says things like, "No justice, no peace." It seems like he's race-baiting when he goes into how "Black are under attack", and "Targeting, arresting, convicting blacks and ultimately killing us is big business." It certainly comes across to me like he's pushing his own agenda.
It's not "race baiting" if it's true.
I can see one or two cops doing that, but seemingly an entire police department orchestrating this seems a little far-fetched.
Well, it already happened in Sanford with the Justin Collison case, so why not now?
There is nothing that we have seen that points to GZ as a racist.
NOTHING.
But yet it's continued over and over on the thread.
He has been called a racist for weeks now and I've seen no evidence of it.
Unless, just the fact TM was black means GZ was racist.
I don't get it.
It depends on one's definition of the term. I think GZ was or is likely to get into an altercation with anyone, regardless of race. However, the fact that he found a kid suspicious just for walking, and not doing anything different, indicates to many that he has underlying negative attitudes about race, because 1) Trayvon did nothing except be black when Zimmerman called police, 2) Zimmerman has made numerous calls about black people and, 3) he clearly said that "they always get away".
I think he was always on the verge of gunning for someone and I believe that his innate prejudices made Trayvon a good target. I believe when he saw Trayvon he felt he was a criminal because he was alone, at night, he didn't recognize him
and he was black. I think he made up his mind due to that and decided he wasn't going to let this one get away. He likely assumed, as a part of prejudicial profiling, that Trayvon had some sort of criminal background, so if he shot him, as long as he set the case up well enough before hand, he could claim it was justified.
Does that make GZ a gibbering racist who likes to wear white hoods, hates black people, believes blacks are animals or inferior or uses the "n" word all the time? No. But, his inner dialogue could certainly point to a race-based profiling that, had it not existed, may have not resulted in death that night. I believe, from a logical look at the parties and the case thus far, that that is the case.
But it is really the response to this shooting and the history of the department and city and county responding, that points to race as an issue in the case. Black people well know that justice is slow and even often non-existent for their people. It appears that a thorough investigation may not have been done. Why? It appears that the local, Sanford state attorney as well as the Chief of police there responded to a case they normally do not respond to and overrode the investigator who wanted to charge Zimmerman. Why? Maybe the same reason Collison was not arrested even when the Sanford police had a tape of him sucker-punching a black man for no reason.
There is a history in that area of serious racism. This case must be examined in the context of that, especially when the response to the shooting veers from what is the norm, which is an arrest.
That's why the activists and so many Americans of all backgrounds are demonstrating. Injustice for black people is not new and does not simply disappear just because a few Supreme Court decisions and wise presidents have tried to force racists to abide by the constitution.
Did the underlying attitude of all those people screaming "Ni&&ers go home!" to little black children wanting to go to school, simply disappear? Did the attitude surrounding the lynchings, the beatings, the hosings, the arrests, etc., vanish? No. Some people are more careful about expressing certain things in public, that's all. Yes, black people can ride in the front of the bus, there is a holiday for MLK, but we still have judges who refuse to marry black and white couples, teens who murder innocent black people while screaming racial epithets and a media that ignores missing black people, differing laws for powder cocaine user who tend to be white and rock cocaine users who tend to be black, among other things. And none of that occurs in a vacuum.
We still have millions of people who have secret hatreds that are communicated subtly, or not so subtly in their homes, or subconscious prejudices that affect how they view, react to or empathize with certain people or situations.
I think we have made great progress in our beautiful country but real and lasting, ever progressing change only happens with collective shame and outrage and a dedication to not only making sure the past does not repeat itself, but that the vestiges of the past are uncovered and rooted out. IMO, that's what this case is about.
My point was, I don't think Al Sharpton would have shown up.
No, he wouldn't have. Because he is an activist for a specific cause -the civil rights of black people - as we all know. And there's nothing wrong with that. People generally pick a cause closest to their heart and work on that. We can't expect everyone to work on every cause.