A Bloggy Puttanesca
(A staple in my house since my single years, a puttanesca is a cheap, low-class pasta dish that clears out little bits of other stuff from the fridge you are trying to get rid of.)
The Media & Trayvon Martin – Of all the various parties I hear criticized about the Martin/Zimmerman case, the one that I find the most confusing is the widespread condemning of the media. (Actually, the media is the second most confusing. But I’m choosing not to count those who are are claiming the most criticism should be leveled at Martin himself for not looking like a younger black man.)
Don’t get me wrong, I have no doubt that it was the sensational nature of the story that got the media’s attention. Had all the various players in Martin’s shooting been the same race – white, hispanic or black – it’s hard to imagine the national media (and its viewers) would have cared nearly as much. Sad but true. But regardless of the reasons they came to the dance, the fact remains that they came – and they managed to create actual journalism in spite of themselves.
Entertainment aside, the media works best when it collects and disseminates accurate and relevant information that the powers that be have a vested interest in keeping hidden from the public. That’s exactly what happened in the Martin case. The police did no real investigation of a kid being shot, citing Florida’s Stand Your Ground Law – which itself was passed more as a political tool than an attempt at crime prevention. In the Martin case, either the police were incompetent and/or dangerously prejudicial, or a law passed for campaigning purposes is potentially harmful to the community. (Or maybe both.) Without the media firestorm, silly as it has been at times, neither potential flaw in the system would be examined.
The media did exactly what they were supposed to do. Good on them.
Apple, Chinese Workers, and This American Life – The media has given embarrassingly little coverage of the retraction of the story on Apple’s factories in Foxconn, China by NPR’s This American Life. The original story, which aired last month, was based on reporting done by independent writer Mike Daisey. Daisey has turned his investigative journalism into a one-man theatre show in order to raise awareness of the working conditions of the people that make your iPad and iPhone.
The original episode, which I heard before the retraction, was as grim as it was riveting. Armed guards, government issued blacklists of employees that spoke out against illegal activities, children working 80 hour weeks, and toxic conditions that led to people being crippled at an early age were among the many everyday life activities at Foxconn witnessed by Daisey. The reason for the retraction? It turned out that almost all of the story was made up. An NPR reporter who was stationed in China heard the piece, and was sure that it was fabricated. This reporter tracked down the translator/guide Daisey used and verified the story was a complete fiction, and then contacted TAL host Ira Glass. TAL devoted an entire show to the retraction, noting what was definitely factually wrong, what was most likely factually wrong, how TAL’s staff allowed themselves to be fooled, and looked to paint a more accurate picture of what life in a Chinese factory might be like. If you have a chance, I urge you to listen to the second episode where the story is retracted. It’s actually more riveting than the original fictional episode. It resonates with me on two fronts:
First, even though they got caught with it’s pants down this entire fiasco is less a sign of TAL’s shoddy journalism, and more an example of why it is so head and shoulders above just above anyone else in the news infotainment world today. Honestly, can you imagine Glenn Beck devoting an entire program to a story he reported on being proven wrong? Or Keith Olberman? Or Bill O’Reilly? Or Rachel Maddow? The media needs more of TAL’s willing humility in the face of accuracy.
However, the really fascinating part of the retraction episode comes from the interview with Daisey himself where he is questioned about the accuracy of his claims. As evidence is brought before him he slowly admits that much of what he reported was made up. (Tellingly, he only admits to the things that have been categorically proven to be fiction; those that just strongly appear to be lies he continues to claim actually happened. He is not remotely convincing in these claims.)
What’s striking is that despite his admission that the facts are made up, he continues – sincerely, I believe – to maintain that the entire story is True. For Daisey, what is True is that Apple is an evil corporation committing evil acts upon an innocent people; therefor facts that do not underscore this narrative are themselves enemies of Truth.
I will do a longer post on this over the next week, but I must say in our era of increasingly market-driven information and political media, I think that we are all far more like Daisey than we feel comfortable admitting. Hell, the Martin case alone seems to have been one giant case of people who knew the Truth before the shooting happened: Depending on the pundit, that Truth might have been that all white policemen are racists, or that there are no white racists anymore, or that anything bad that happens to kids is the fault of gansta rap, or whatever. As they have “reported” on the Martin shooting, pundits and TV/radio infotainment hosts on both sides have happily embraced internet rumors and discarded actual facts that did not speak to these Truths. What is the difference between these news-media staples and Daisey, really, other than the convenience that they lack an Ira Glass to grill them and hold them accountable on air?
I’ll have more to say on this in a longer post. But for those bored and looking for a way to pass an hour this weekend, I wanted to give a shout out to the TAL piece.
Family Values Ought to Mean Valuing Families – When memos from the National Organization for Marriage were unsealed by federal court as part of an ongoing investigation, it was the internal strategy to turn blacks and gays against one another that got all the attention. Which seems odd, since this came as a surprise to exactly nobody. What was far more worthy of shock and condemnation was the attempt to use $120,000 to identify and lure children of gay couples to go on camera and condemn their parents for future advertisements. You know, to promote healthy, loving families and all.
That’s all I’m going to say about that. Either you just intuitively understand why you should get your own circle of Hell for implementing such a plan, or you don’t. But the next time someone tells me how important outlawing SSM is for the sanctity of the family unit, it will be hard to hear anything other than my memory of this NOM strategy plus blah, blah, blah.
Justified – Madmen, Game of Thrones and The Walking Dead get all the pixels on the internet (here included), but FX’s Justified deserves just as much attention. The Elmore Leonard vehicle, which centers around the deeply flawed but still unbelievably cool US Marshal Raylan Givens, continues to have the best story-arc TV villains since whenever Joss Wedon was last on the air – and this year’s two additions to the Rogues Gallery are no exception. Mykelti Williamson’s Ellstin Limehouse is that rare baddie that is so part of the natural balance of things around him that you find yourself almost rooting for him; Neal McDonough’s Robert Quarles is so awesomely and simultaneously chipper and creepy that it’s hard to remember he’s not a Joss Whedon character.
If you haven’t seen the it, I encourage you to check it out on Netflix, On Demand, or even the FX website.
lure children of gay couples to go on camera and condemn their parents for future advertisements. You know, to promote healthy, loving families and all.
You just don’t value The Greater Good.Report
The Greater GoodReport
Wiki is now using the “less angelic” photo of Trayvon Martin and the “less demonic” photo of George Zimmerman.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shooting_of_Trayvon_Martin
We shall see if it stands. This entire episode has proven that perception = reality. Wiki is one of the battlefields, the democratization of truth.Report
Tod:
If Zimm’s story is true then it seems that the SYG law worked just fine and should be kept. What I find amusing is that Dems aren’t even waiting to find out the facts before inviting Martin’s parents to DC to testify about racial profiling for a propaganda stunt. I want to know how Zimm could have racially profiled Martin given that he is a Dem and we know they don’t do that sort of thing.Report
Excellent point. Either Zimmerman stalked and killed a man because he was a racist white man who hates black people, or Martin deserved to be shot.
It’s a shame there aren’t any other possible scenarios.Report
Tod:
Either the homicide was justified or it was not, there really aren’t any other scenarios.Report
Scott, if you missed the Volokh link, the Stand Your Ground law makes it tougher to indict.
At best, it’s a coin flip, 50-50. Nobody knows. This falls short of “probable” cause. I’m reading that the lead investigator wanted to arrest Zimmerman. However, the State Attorney said the case had no legs.
[Sanford Police Chief Bill Lee announced earlier this month that he was stepping down “temporarily” as head of the department amid the public uproar over the shooting. State’s Attorney Norman Wolfinger, from Florida’s 18th District, also stepped aside in the case.]
Yeah, baby. Once the shit starts going down, like whoever maced the #Occupy @ UCal Davis, just call in sick instead. Do NOT do your duty. Pay a doctor buddy to diagnose you with cancer. Drive your car into a tree, say you were drinking and enter rehab. Get yourself caught with 3 hookers and a hermaphroditic dwarf and you’ll someday take Keith Olbermann’s place on the Al Gore Network. Anything, but just get yrself out of the line of fire before your career and your life are ruined.
So now there’s a new State Attorney appointed, Angela Corey.
She’s so screwed. She can’t get a conviction because unless she subpoenas the Martians who were flying by and videotaped it, nobody can say what happened beyond a reasonable doubt—one way or the other, as Tod eloquently limns:
Either Zimmerman stalked and killed a man because he was a racist white man who hates black people, or Martin deserved to be shot.
.
Congratulations, Ms. Corey. Your career has just been ruined. Unless somehow you find us a way out of this mess. In which case you’re the next governor of Florida, and if you move quick enough, Mitt Romney’s choice for VP. But mostly I think you’re screwed.Report
If you had paid attention to the whole post you pointed out on Volokh, you’d see that probable cause, while vague, is generally held to be a less demanding standard than preponderance of the evidence, which is the 51% probability standard. So, in fact, a 50-50 shot IS probable cause.Report
Thx for the wanking, Mr. Fnord. State Atty Angela Corey is screwed. Even if you’re correct about the indictment process in the face of the Florida law, there’s no way Zimmerman is guilty of anything beyond a reasonable doubt.
Think the Casey Anthony case, if you follow these things. She was guilty of something, but what??? So, she got off.
A trial—and subsequent acquittal—will create even a bigger shitstorm. I hope you can hear me on this now. I’m trying to stay at arm’s length and not get anybody’s wankage on my new suit. I take no position on what happened in the moments leading to Trayvon’s death. I don’t know, I don’t know how I can know, unless some other evidence pops up.
Pls don’t dog me. Of course I paid attention to the post from Volokh that I’ve linked to four times now. But I do appreciate you reading it. Few did.Report
My understanding is that the SYS statute, in Fla. at any rate, removes review from a grand jury to a judge.
Judicial review is an important aspect of the system working properly.Report
Sorry I got evidence of your intellectual dishonesty, I mean my wanking, all over your new suit.
If you’re trying to stay at arm’s length, Mr. Van Dyke, here’s an easy way to do it: stop talking.Report
Oh no, am I being shouted down again? Whatever shall I do?
Respond to the argument or move along, Mr. Fnord. I’ve been wanked on by bigger dicks than you. You clearly misread the Volokh post
Florida law, though, clearly resolves this: “A law enforcement agency … may not arrest [a] person for using force [in a self-defense situation] unless it determines that there is probable cause that the force that was used was unlawful.”
if you read it atall.Report
I defer to your exceptional wanking expertise, Mr. Van Dyke.Report
because of advice like this, people die.
Now maybe you think you’re Mr. Special, and you get to Not Do Your Damn Job simply because your job got consequences.
Seems like there’s a lotta them around, in fact. I almost feel like pulling some cases, exceptin’ you wouldn’t believe me.Report
Given that a man is dead, you really can’t hope for a better scenario than one in which he deserved it. Because the alternative is that he didn’t.Report
Mr. Berg, my best understanding is this was adolescent fantasy on both their parts, and it ended up adult. Death. Zimmerman was Batman, Trayvon Martin was keeping it real.
This isn’t funny, in this context.
http://www.comedycentral.com/video-clips/b12r81/chappelle-s-show-when-keeping-it-real-goes-wrong—darius-jame
Do I think this is what happened? Yes, I do. Based on my own best guess, it was no more meaningful and no less stupid than this. It fits. These were both adolescents in our society, Trayvon 17, George 26. I’m not punking Obamacare here, but we just kept children on their parents’ health insurance until age 26. We have created a safe zone for adolescence into your late 20s.
Mr. Berg, neither young man “deserved” it, one to die, the other to live with killing him. They were both playacting, “acting out,” until the moment the gun went off.
Jesus, why can’t we see this? These were our children, acting out a script that we their elders wrote, they didn’t. There is no meaning in the actions of children.
______________________________
There’s an occasional commenter/lurker/fisker/pseudonym for a regular, “George Turner,” who swoops in now & then for clarity’s sake. He gets the details right, at least a solid enough theory to establish the legal parameters of a “reasonable doubt.” Absent some additional evidence from a Martian videocamera, there can be no conviction.
https://ordinary-times.com/blog/2012/03/28/my-quick-take-on-the-martin-zimmerman-issue/#comment-260714Report
“…and verified the story was a complete fiction”
Part of the difficulty of the whole Daisey affair is that some of it is true and some of it is fiction. Daisey did go to China, he did stand outside the Foxconn plant, he did talk with workers. Large parts of his account are highly plausible, as TAL explained, because Apple’s own internal audits reported violations of various kinds of their supplier code of conduct. Also, Daisey’s practice of taking things that were in the news and incorporating them into his story undercut the idea that it was a complete fiction – the n-hexane poisoning story for instance. What makes the whole situation so sad is that had Daisey just represented his account for what it was, a dramatization, an incorporation of some events that happened to him, as well as events he’d gotten from news reports, and as not journalism – he could have advanced a cause he cares about as well as moving people. Even knowing the exaggerations, Daisey’s story is quite a piece, serving an important purpose of focusing attention on the serious problem of labor practices in China and the large problematics of economic globalization.
All that said, I look forward to your next post on the topic.Report
The hardest part about being a “journalist” is that playing it straight doesn’t pay. It doesn’t even get awards. “Muckraking” pays. Fictional muckraking—Upton Sinclair, The Jungle—that’s stuff for the ages. Redford and Hoffman in All the President’s Men isn’t even what really happened, but it keeps Bob Woodward on the bestseller lists. Seymour Hersh has got some things [My Lai] very right, some things [his JFK expose] egregiously wrong. But he remains a journalistic superstar.
Geraldo Rivera, enough said. True, he was forced to tapdance if not gobble his own feces
Geraldo Rivera: Reflections on Last Week’s Trayvon Martin ‘Hoodie’ Comments
http://latino.foxnews.com/latino/news/2012/03/30/geraldo-rivera/
but he’ll survive. In a nicer house than most any reporter who ever lived, especially the ones who played it straight.
And I like Geraldo, but he’s always been an advocate, a muckraker, one who tells one side of the story passionately. People like that. People don’t like ombudsmen. Name me a famous ombudman. Tell both sides of the story? Both sides will hate you accordingly, alternately when you go against them in turn. Do not do this, unless you have the belly for it, that you love the search for truth more than you fancy your popularity.
The ombudsman’s column should be the most popular feature of all at a newspaper. Instead, it’s the biggest misery of all, and nobody gets out alive.
Poor Geraldo. Makes you almost feel sorry for him, getting all out of sync with his “base” and all.
It has been a wrenching week.
There is nothing more disorienting than to be attacked by people you love.
Rather than an existential threat, it is frustrating and depressing, particularly because I meant well.
What caused the schism with my base was my rant in this space last week against hoodies like the one worn by 17-year old Trayvon Martin on the evening he was shot dead by George Zimmerman inside a modest, burglary-plagued gated community in Sanford, Florida.
Read more: http://latino.foxnews.com/latino/news/2012/03/30/geraldo-rivera/#ixzz1qlDVHLHUReport
Because the language was as brutal as it was straight-forward and simplistic, half the nation — mostly the young and the minority half — condemned me.
It was actually the half with IQs over 100. who know perfectly well that hooded sweatshirts are almost as omnipresent as jeans.Report
Well, let’s have a laugh at Geraldo together then, Mr. Schilling. For what it’s worth.Report
Hoodies aren’t new, all the best-dressed criminals wear them
Report
Damn, this is gonna bug me all day – who is this? It’s on the tip of my tongue.Report
Unabomber.Report
By the way, in the winter I usually wear a gray hoodie as a jacket, and sunglasses since Austin is only a few miles from the sun. My girlfriend frequently calls me the Unabomber.Report
THANK YOU!!!! That really was going to bother me all day.Report
Because there’s nothing scarier than a math professor in a hoodie.Report
You missed the true evil.Report
In fairness – I do feel an urge to shoot him.Report
“Zimmerman’s particular 911 calls on the night he killed Trayvon prove he was acting with good intentions, however over-zealous and misguided. Zimmerman saw the kid as another in the neighborhood’s long sorry string of similarly garbed kids “up to no good.””
From the Geraldo piece…
This begs several questions…
Was there indeed a long string of people up to no good in that neighborhood?
If so, what did they look like? Particularly, what were they wearing?
If it is known what they looked like and what they wore, was Zimmerman privy to this information?Report
Can we all agree that the real crime here is that grown men have been reduced to using the word “hoodie?”Report
I have not yet forgiven the MSM for making me know who the Kardashians are.Report
Nor should you. Ever.Report
With no undue respect to NOM types, it’s not actually hypocrisy if they don’t consider gay couples and their children to be real families. I don’t want to defend them, but arguments of the form “You’re a hypocrite because you don’t accept my premises” annoy me. See also: “If you’re so pro-life, then how can you support the death penalty?”Report
“You’re a hypocrite because you don’t accept my premises”
I’m sorry, did I come off as sounding like my problem with paying children to condemn their parents on camera for a political campaign was bad because it was “hypocritical?” My bad. To be clear, then:
I had not meant to communicate that my problem with the NOM strategy was that it was hypocritical; I generally find hypocrisy to be a universally and wholly human trait, and consequently try not to condemn others for falling into its trap.
Rather, I had meant to communicate that my problem with paying children to condemn their parents on camera stems from it being a callously thuggish and evil thing to do, and that anyone that can think that doing so is a “good” for any family should be slapped upside the head and drummed out of politics – regardless of what social issue they are fighting for, or their political philosophy or party affiliation.
I apologize to the NOM for any confusion my comments might have caused.Report
I believe all the elements of ‘family’ are easily satisfied by any objective measure.
If we can count single-parent households as ‘families,’ then it would appear as if the presence of opposing genders is rather arbitrary.Report
I loved my late mother dearly, and even though on the outside I’m so much like my dad, few know it’s my mom who made me the man and the person that I am.
But as anyone who’s ever had a mother might attest, perhaps one is enough.Report
Didn’t the Soviet Union teach children to inform on their parents?Report
The United States does these days.
We have no need to look to the past.Report
“So why this desire to paint Martin, rather than the man who shot him, as the guilty party? Partly, of course, it’s just a reaction to his death becoming a cause célèbre on the left—it’s the same sort of impulse that leads some conservatives to delight in “Fry Mumia” T-shirts. Beyond that, though, some on the right are deeply invested in the idea that anti-black racism is no longer much of a problem in the United States, and certainly not a problem on the scale of false accusations of racism. You might call these people anti-anti-racists. They are determined to push back against any narrative that would suggest that a black man has been targeted for the color of his skin.”
http://www.thedailybeast.com/articles/2012/03/26/why-conservatives-are-smearing-trayvon-martin-s-reputation.html?obref=obinsite
A great, great piece.
Report
Liberal media at it again, who is surprised? NBC edited Zimm’s 911 that was broadcast on the Today show. Guess the public needs Fox to keep the liberal media honest.
http://www.washingtonpost.com/blogs/erik-wemple/post/nbc-to-do-internal-investigation-on-zimmerman-segment/2012/03/31/gIQAc4HhnS_blog.html?tid=pm_pop
Report
Scott-
I offer no defense for what NBC did there. Besides being an abuse of the privileges afforded our media and demonstrating a complete disregard for their responsibilities, it offers little towards what should be the single goal of this work: justice. Framing Zimmerman is not justice.
However, I don’t see what that has to do with the linked story and the quote, which has a lot more to do with a broader ideology (the “anti-anti-racist”) than with the actions of any particular media outlet.Report
Not a “smear,” necessarily. The “angelic” picture of Tayvon, along with the following assumption of no social maladjustment, leaves the only reasonable conclusion that George Zimmerman—less than angelic-looking, with some history of wack behavior—initiated the fight that led to the fatal tragedy.
Mostly true, especially as the counter to Jesse Jackson’s demagoguery that “blacks are under attack.” For if Jackson is right, we are already at race war. If he is wrong, then we have a chance.
Now every time a white is assaulted/killed by blacks, what if a demagogue got out in front, that “whites are under attack”? Whipped up the outraged mob in the “caucasian community”? Tell me the pushback wouldn’t be there, and hopefully not just from the left, but from everybody.
But when you have an event like the Wisconsin State Fair last summer, where Tweeter-gathered bands of black kids indiscriminately assaulted whites based on skin color alone, “whites are under attack” would have been literally true.
http://www.todaystmj4.com/news/local/126825018.html
However, we would hope that nobody would try to demagogue this into a greater commentary on the state of the nation, and that we would hope [and] pray that this was more the exception than the rule.
As we should be saying—hoping and praying—that the Trayvon tragedy was just one of those things, that George Zimmerman is George Zimmerman and not “America.”
Michelle Goldberg is quite right, in between her grenade-tossing. If only she understood what she wrote.Report
As I noted (and was ignored) the last time someone (you?) brought up the WI State Fair incident, I was at the fair that entire week, including the night of the “riots” and to say that the news reporting was exaggerated is a massive understatement. I guess the Lame Stream Left Wing Media gets it right when they’re misrepresenting black youth though.Report
Shall we bring up what happened at Kentucky over the weekend? Or will that be written off as it almost always is?Report
As in “Stupid Young People Doing Stupid Things”?
I’m not a sports fan. At all. I enjoy the games (some of them) but I don’t have a team and I don’t really root unless there’s someone I know actually playing on the field. The whole “wreck Main Street when we win/lose” thing is completely foreign to me but it does seem pretty common.Report
My point is that it often gets the “Stupid young people doing stupid things” treatment when it’s white folks and the “OHMYGOD, IT IS THE END OF CIVILITY AS WE KNOW IT” when it’s black folks. And the frequency of the former far outweigh the frequency of the latter, owing largely to the post-sporting-event phenomenon, especially on college campuses.Report
Yeah, that’s pretty much the point I tried to make the last time the State Fair stuff got brought up.
Stallis after the races: Drunk White Folks smashing stuff and pissing in gardens. Meh.
Stallis after the state fair: RACE WAR!Report
Sorry for the confusion.
This plays out in a myriad of ways and has to do with how we tend to “otherize” people. Generally speaking, we are better able to accept the actions of people we identify with. When we are able to see ourselves in the person, we can better understand the circumstances that might have led them to do what they did.
It is why old people can’t understand what the kids these days are doing, which men and women find each other so baffling, and why we respond so differently to equal actions done by people of different races. There is an extent to which this is a part of human nature. The problem is when we give in to this, refusing to step back and say, “Is this a rational response or an emotional response?” It is worse still when people actively attempt to defend these biases. “No, no, no,” they insist, “it really IS different when those people do it than when these people do it.” They can rarely offer any substantive reason for why though…Report
Kazzy, the guy (?) right above you, the one who said that he was at the fair that Tom brought up and that the media coverage was highly exaggerated, and the one you were ostensibly responding to with your comment- you just wrote his point off by ignoring his comment altogether. That also counts as “writing off”.Report
Rufus-
My comment wasn’t as much as reply to his direct point as it was a contribution to the broader conversation about news reporting on “riots”.Report
Fair enough. It’s really just a pet peeve I’ve had around this site in the last few months that you probably unintentionally brushed against.Report
I could have been clearer. Sorry to have set you off. And on a Monday, for Pete’s sake!Report
I’m a notoriously angry man.Report
Your avatar gives that away…Report
Some pseudonym gives an “eyewitness” account that contradicts the papers and that’s it? While you’re at it, who really shot JFK?
How about this assault then? Actually, my point was that these incidents should not be leveraged into a greater narrative. George Zimmerman is not “America.”Report
TVD,
who shot JFK is obvious, though obviously you’re more inclined to listen to Spector than I am.
No, George Zimmerman is not AMERICA.
You are, the person who would turn his back from his duty, and advise others to do the same. I suppose I ought to be charitable, and say at least you aren’t shooting them in cold blood. But they’re dead just the same.Report
Phil Spector shot JFK? That explains so much…Report
No, Tom, that’s not “it”. What I’m saying is, “Okay, let’s hear what this commenter has to say and maybe ask him some questions about it, or even argue with him about it, but at least engage in some way with his comment”, and what you’re saying is, “He uses a pseudonym, let’s dismiss what he said out of hand.” So, apparently, that’s it.
In fact, you quite often make what I consider to be absolutely correct criticisms of the people here who dismiss the points you raise out of hand without engaging with them- the “99” stuff, and so forth.- but you also very frequently dismiss the points other people raise in response to you out of hand without engaging with them at all. So, okay, we’ll ignore this person too because they use a pseudonym. Must be lying.
Furthermore, I agree with your point about not leveraging these events into a larger narrative about “America”, but it’s hard to remember that point when you also argue that the narrative, ““whites are under attack” would have been literally true.” As for the Seneca story, yep, that one was on Drudge nearly a week ago, so I saw that one too. But, if you’re not bringing it up to push any narrative of your own about the “racial landscape of America”, then I don’t see what the point is. It seems as if you’re going to post every Drudge-approved rampaging blacks story here to make your larger point that we should stop trying to spin narratives about race in America out of random acts of crime and violence. If you want to make that point, however, you should stick to that point.Report
Sorry, Rufus, but pseudonyms on the internet aren’t credible sources to me. Hell, the way NBC just edited the 911 call, even the credible sources aren’t always credible.
As for the rest, acknowledged with my thanks.Report
The real problem with this approach is that we are not comparing like events.
Much of the outrage surrounding the Trayvon Martin situation has had to do with the “official response”. People are going to hurt and kill other people. Sometimes that is going to be because of how the other person looks. I don’t know that this will ever end. Holding up examples of times where people who looked one way hurt or killed someone who looked another way with the difference in their appearances possibly being a motivating factor as evidence of some sort of organized attack on people who look a certain way is silly. But when the government seems to constantly fail people who look a certain way, or talk a certain way, or act a certain way… it raises very legitimate questions. Now, there are many possible answers to those questions, many of which have nothing to do with race.
Trayvon Martin’s death is not evidence of an attack on black America. The response by the police/DA, many members of the media, and individuals across this country do point to animosity, hostility, and/or a disregard towards black Americans, particularly young black men.
Six black dudes beat up a white guy, were arrested, and face hate crime charges. The system worked.
One Hispanic dude shoots a black kid and is still sleeping in his own bed. The system failed. And if there is greater evidence that the system worked, please present it. A lack of transparency in and of itself is a system failure.Report
Mange moi M.Van Dyke (if that is your real name)
I’m pseudo because I’ve been stalked on the internet and it’s not a pretty picture. I try to avoid that these days.
If you want proof, I’ll gladly take a picture of this week’s Shepherd Express next to the very State Fair entrance described in the news report you forwarded and post it here. Not that it matters, since I contradict your world view and am therefore irrelevant.
The simple fact of the matter is that on that evening a bunch of people did really stupid things. Some of them were young black men and they were, with no exceptions that I’m aware of, the only ones punished for any of them. I’ll leave how this is relevant to the discussion at hand as an exercise for the reader.Report
Mr. Pseudonym, I prefer to believe you—it’s a disturbing thought. However, we had a sockpuppet scandal here just a month ago.
https://ordinary-times.com/blog/2012/02/29/sock-puppets-not-just-for-kids-anymore/
We have several shady characters around here who are obsessed with winning regardless of the truth. Your “name,” I do not recognize.
I often opine that our national crisis remains epistemological. At this very moment, somebody’s on the radio saying they saw George Zimmerman in bandages the next day.
The interviewer is asking outrageously contentious questions [or at least contentiously asking things the witness had no personal knowledge of], like “Do you think anyone has the right to ‘pull the trigger'” and “Do you think this was racial?”
[Answers: “I think something happened that night where he had to defend himself,”, and no, “I don’t think race is involved at all, because I’ve seen black, African-American folks come to George’s house.”]
http://www.myfoxtampabay.com/dpp/news/neighbor-defends-george-zimmerman-03302012
[Oh, look, it’s Fox News! Even though local Fox stations have nothing to do with the Bill O’Reilly network.]
But Mr. Public, I am sincere—I really hope the Wisconsin State Fair thing didn’t go down the way the media said it did. I found it an upsetting thought for our country, and take no delight in such things.
Just as I hope it’s true that George Zimmerman really has had black visitors as friends, and that he didn’t “hunt Trayvon down like a dog” out of racial animus. OK?
http://www.realclearpolitics.com/video/2012/03/27/dem_congressman_trayvon_was_hunted_down_like_a_dog_shot_down_in_the_street.html
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Yeah, but TVD? I know fools who have worked in Detroit. Zimmerman is America — or at least significant portions of it.
You go walk in your fairy tale america.
“America never was America to me.”Report
On the other hand, there is this.
http://articles.orlandosentinel.com/2012-03-31/news/os-trayvon-martin-george-zimmerman-911-20120331_1_voice-identification-expert-reasonable-scientific-certaintyReport
And this,
http://www.myfoxtampabay.com/dpp/news/neighbor-defends-george-zimmerman-03302012
A neighbor saw Zimm with bandages on his head and face.Report
A legal question that I have been wondering about…
Under this law, would it be possible for there to be two people standing their ground against each against the other?Report
Ah, the famous Zax conundrum.Report
Well played, sir.Report
I wondered that as well (not sure if it was on this thread or elsewhere). If Trayvon legitimately feared for his life with this unfamiliar man following and watching him, than any action he took would have been theoretically justified. If we accept the theory that he initiated the physicality, than Zimmerman would also have been justified if he believed his life was in jeopardy from Trayvon’s attempts to protect his own life. Like a snake eating its tail…Report
No, only one person can claim a legitimate use of force.Report
And with Trayvon dead, his ability to make that claim seems gone, no? Which almost seems to incentivize killing the other person, as opposed to simply disabling them*.
* I don’t mean to imply that Zimmerman knew this and made a calculated decision to shoot-to-kill to avoid just this type of scenario. My hunch is that things happened too fast for that. But it is worth pointing out when a law can potentially create such a perverse incentive wherein killing someone is better than not. This takes us back to the idea that a rapist could kill his victim and insist the sex was consenual until she went crazy and started hitting him, at which point he simply stood his ground and defended himself.Report
Actually, I think since what the law allows is the use of deadly force, it makes it kind of a moot point. (Kind of an “applies to last-man standing” thing.)Report
Also, does anyone know where the law itself draws the line at when it is appropriate to use deadly force when fearing for your life? Like, I’m sure that it doesn’t protect me if I honestly believe some commenter is going to kill me because of something he says here, so I buy plane tickets to wherever he lives to take him out first. But does it protect, for example, someone with a severe mental illness that truly believed some random guy in the street was out to get him? If not, why not? I obviously haven’t ever read the actual law, so I really don’t know.Report
http://www.leg.state.fl.us/statutes/index.cfm?App_mode=Display_Statute&Search_String&URL=0700-0799/0776/Sections/0776.013.html
You might have to click around because there are several different statutes that sort of say the same thing but also sort of contradict each other. I don’t know how laws are generally written, but this is confusing as F.Report
This is a really interesting part:
“776.041?Use of force by aggressor.—The justification described in the preceding sections of this chapter is not available to a person who:
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I could see a situation where each of two people in an altercation could reasonably claim “self-defense” after shooting the other. If Trayvon had been packing, for example, the tape of Zimmerman getting out of the car despite warnings from 911 would be sufficient for me to say that Zimmerman was looking for trouble and, indeed, found it.
The debate I had originally thought we were going to have was about the theory/practice of “Stand Your Ground” laws but if the law allows you to pick a fight, get your ass kicked, then kill the person you provoked and claim that you were “standing your ground”, I’d say that it’s unequivocally a bad law.Report
but if the law allows you to pick a fight, get your ass kicked, then kill the person you provoked and claim that you were “standing your ground”, I’d say that it’s unequivocally a bad law.
On a causal reading, I don’t think that’s what the law says. It’s what people have mistakenly understood the law to be saying. Read the provisions. They apply to the use of deadly force against others when forcible entry into dwelling is occurring or has occurred, or as a response to an imminent threat if you have a right to be where you are and haven’t engaged in any illegal activities. Stalking, I’d imagine, constitutes some form of illegal activity. As would other forms of harrassment or etc which might otherwise justify killing as a response.
But! IANAL.Report
This part seems to constitute a defense for Martin:
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it seems to me Martin is the only one who can legitimately use SYG as a justification for what may have subsequently happened.
I agree with this 100%.Report
A huge issue is that the law does not require that self-defense be made as an affirmative defense in a court of law.Report
That may be so. But if it’s distinguished from standard self-defense, the SYG provisions require either 1) that Trayvon was “in the process of unlawfully and forcefully entering, or had unlawfully and forcibly entered, a dwelling…” as well as that Zimmerman “knew or had reason to believe that an unlawful and forcible entry or unlawful and forcible act was occurring or had occurred”, or 2) that Zimmerman had a right to be where he was, that he hadn’t engaged in any illegal activity, and that there was an imminent threat not to his own life (since that’s self-defense) but to the lives of others, or in the prevention of a forcible felony.
If Trayvon attacked Zimmerman, the argument should be that he defended himself. That people argue instead that he has a right to stand his ground is, on my reading of the law, incoherent, since Trayvon’s actions and Zimmerman’s beliefs around those actions fail to satisfy the conditions under which the law applies. On the other hand, if anyone has a right to stand his ground according to the “threat to his own life” provision and meet force with force, it’s Trayvon.
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It’s kind of modeled on the “Castle” law, is it not?
To what extent is self-defense an affirmative defense when it comes to in-home incidents?Report
FWIW:
“Forcible felony.—“Forcible felony” means treason; murder; manslaughter; sexual battery; carjacking; home-invasion robbery; robbery; burglary; arson; kidnapping; aggravated assault; aggravated battery; aggravated stalking; aircraft piracy; unlawful throwing, placing, or discharging of a destructive device or bomb; and any other felony which involves the use or threat of physical force or violence against any individual.”
“Any person who willfully, maliciously, and repeatedly follows, harasses, or cyberstalks another person commits the offense of stalking, a misdemeanor of the first degree, punishable as provided in s. 775.082 or s. 775.083.”
“776.032?Immunity from criminal prosecution and civil action for justifiable use of force.—
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