cloudboy -> RE: Zimmerman Trial - LIVE (6/29/2013 1:31:07 PM)
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Good NYT piece today: The New York Times June 28, 2013 The Zimmerman Trial By CHARLES M. BLOW This first week of testimony in the George Zimmerman trial has proved to be nothing short of fascinating. On one level, the case is simple: if Zimmerman had not pursued — some say stalked — Trayvon Martin that dark, rainy night, Martin would still be alive. That’s the logical argument. The legal one is more complex. The case, it seems to me, spins on some crucial questions, some of which we may never completely know the answers to. What was it about Martin in particular that Zimmerman found “suspicious” in the first place? So far, there has been no testimony that Martin was doing anything other than walking slowly and talking on a phone to a girl, as teenage boys are wont to do. Did Zimmerman consider every person walking thusly in the neighborhood to be suspicious? If not, what made Martin different? Was some sort of bias at play, whether an explicit one or an implicit one? Why did Zimmerman leave his car, armed with his gun, and follow Martin? When the dispatcher realized that Zimmerman was in pursuit and told him, “We don’t need you to do that,” did Zimmerman stop? Did Martin know that he was being followed, as his friend Rachel Jeantel testified, and did he feel threatened by the stranger following him? In fact, the threat levels are a larger, more complex issue altogether. Who felt threatened, the teenager with the candy and the soda or the man pursuing him with a gun and a live round in the chamber? The answer on the surface would seem obvious, but it’s possible that both felt some level of threat. It’s also possible that threat responses washed back and forth between them like water in a tub, neither of them knowing about the other what we know now — that Zimmerman was armed and Martin was not. --------- http://www.nytimes.com/2013/06/29/opinion/blow-the-zimmerman-trial.html?ref=opinion&_r=0&pagewanted=print
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