desertrain10;6055226 said:smh....you don't think it mannered the jury of 6 was made up of 5 white women who more then likely have no idea what it means to be racially profiled, you think they have the same natural distrust of whites, police officers that most blacks have....how could they possibly understand what may have been going through the mind of tray or sympathize with his plight that night
I make no assumptions on those jury members because I don’t know them, and I don’t know their motivations. And if one jury member was a black woman, then what about her? Didn’t she approve Zimmerman’s acquittal. Is she flawed as well? Or does she get a pass because she’s black? As a jury member, you make your decision based on EVIDENCE. Not so much prior experience, prejudices, sympathies, and other emotions. It’s simply evidence and law. Again, if these jury members were flawed, and if there is proof that this is so, then a retrial or appeal should be imminent if possible.
desertrain10;6055226 said:was it not the plan of the defense to feed into the jury's fears and prejudices when they paraded around an old picture of a shirtless trayvon with a gold grill...and do you honestly feel they would've tried the same tactic had the jury been made up of black men and women. seriously doubt it
If that is truly how it went down, then that’s deplorable. But let’s not act like that kind of bs happens on both sides. This is slightly not the same thing, but we can’t forget the old pictures of very young Trayvon that was paraded around in order to give the impression that Zimmerman ruthlessly shot a cute kid.
desertrain10;6055226 said:yes, there may be more pressing issues i agree...but sensible people know rallies like the ones where people were demanding justice for the martin family, aren't going to curb a complex issues such as black on black violence which has deep socioeconomic roots. that's accomplished through policy making from a seemly inept government that has time and time again championed corporate interest over those of its people, no matter who was in office
I agree. But I wouldn’t write off protests and rallies off so quickly. That’s where activism and support gathers and organizes public opinion to pressure our government into much needed reform. What I despise is this senseless and pointless bitching and violence and hatred that is only making things worse and helping us further divide amongst ourselves.
desertrain10;6055226 said:also understand we live in a day in age where in black men as well as Muslims, latinos, gays are being strategically targeted and/or profiled by state officials across the nation...that's another big reason why narratives like trayvon martin's stir so many emotions and consequently got so much media coverage
I agree and disagree, but I think that you trust the media more than me. The media imo just wants a juicy story that most people will find some interest in. If the media cared about the trials and tribulations that blacks, Muslims, latinos, and gays experience, they’d have so many stories to run, they wouldn’t have the time to cover them all. On the contrary, most of the stories we get are exclusively about the trials and tribulations of relatively wealthy white people, especially pretty white women. Chicago gang wars don’t make it on the national stage. Poverty or incompetent schools in the inner-city don’t either.
desertrain10;6055226 said:as far as class goes .... race and class as inextricably intertwined categories because of this country’s centuries of racial oppression. no coincidence that there is wage, wealth gap between whites and non-whites
Agreed. But I personally think that class is a much more important, comprehensive, and less sensational topic that needs considerable attention in comparison to race.