11119. robertjayb - 7/14/2013 5:59:26 PM The "child" was a fit teenager (17-18?), a full head or more taller than Zimmerman with weight appropriate to his height.
Zimmerman's Mixed Martial Arts instructor considered him so athletically inept that he would not allow him to box and he rated his skills at 0.05 on a 10-point scale.
(a TV interview with the MMA guy.) 11120. judithathome - 7/14/2013 6:14:58 PM And that gym owner had no vested interest in promoting his services while testifying, did he? Although if he can't get a guy's proficiency past a 1 on the 1 to 10 scale in 8 months, he's services are pretty piss-poor.
11121. arkymalarky - 7/14/2013 6:37:01 PM If you are following me down a dark street, you're damn right I can confront you and defend myself. It's like I tell kids about bullying. I have a basic right to be left alone. If you go out of your way to harass someone on a dark street you get what you get. Had Martin killed Zimmerman too bad for Zimmerman. It just didn't occur to Martin for whatever reason that he would be shot, evidently. 11122. arkymalarky - 7/14/2013 6:39:51 PM And in response to anomie, I accept the jury system outcome. The fact that you only do when it agrees with you is telling wrt your civics instruction. 11123. arkymalarky - 7/14/2013 6:42:59 PM Manslaughter is a tragic event precipitated by negligence and usually stupidity. 11124. anomie - 7/14/2013 9:33:45 PM Arky, I was a fairly mediocre student but it's not hard to understand the concept of appeals vs double jeopardy. According to you, Rosa Parks should have just accepted her conviction, I suppose? All of you who so graciously proclaim how accepting you are of the verdict fail to mention the fact that you have no other choice. You can't retry him for the same crime. Of course you can continue to harass him with civil or Federal charges, but in fairness I sure hop not. No one's doing any favors by "accepting" verdicts of not guilty. 11125. anomie - 7/14/2013 9:36:02 PM "If you go out of your way to harass someone on a dark street you get what you get..." And there you go again. Convicting Zimmerman on an unproven if/then scenario. 11126. arkymalarky - 7/14/2013 9:56:22 PM If you say Zimmerman wasn't following Martin you're hopeless. if you think following somebody on a Dark night is not harassment then your doubly hopeless.And you doknow MLK spent time in jail, right? No one said anything about double jeopardy. Yes, there's an appeal process for the accused. So? No one argued Zimmerman shouldn't have the right of appeal. My contention is that had he hone through the entire process and lost you'd be screaming "travesty of justice!" 11127. anomie - 7/14/2013 10:18:10 PM I think it's a travesty of justice as is. The man has been through hell, and there's more to come. 11128. arkymalarky - 7/14/2013 10:51:02 PM Boo. Hoo. That kid's death deserved s hearing. 11129. judithathome - 7/14/2013 11:04:01 PM " The man has been through hell, and there's more to come."
Oh yeah...he's been through hell...he got over $300,000 on-line and he gets profits from that friend's book which probably sold like hotcakes after the guy testified...they had the name of the book up each time he opened his mouth. And next will be George's book, plus the fees he'll get from a re-interview with Hannity and god knows who else.
Yeah, he's been through hell all right...I'm sure Trayvon Martin would trade places with the "hell" Zimmerman CAN go through but unfortunately, Martin has no choice in the matter, does he? 11130. judithathome - 7/14/2013 11:08:34 PM The man has shown not one whit of remorse over carrying out "God's plan". Those were his exact words...he "wouldn't change a thing he did" that night and considers it "God's plan" for him.
Hopefully, God is a bit miffed and has really rotten things in mind as part of that plan.
But we all know that won't happen...he'll continue to rake in money and have a nice tidy little life, not bothered at all by tawdry little things like regret or remorse. 11131. anomie - 7/14/2013 11:15:43 PM Of course his death deserves a hearing. No question.
Martin's death is tragic no matter what part he played in the events. I don't know if he attacked Zimmerman, but something happened that triggered a series of events. You can cite FACT FACT only up to a point, and none that describe an illegal act. After that point of known events, you're just emoting. Let's say Arky is right and Martin was scared or angry and he attacked Zimmerman. I suppose Zimmerman's right of self defense is somehow revoked in your view. Why? At what point does he have the right to stop having his head bashed in?
11132. judithathome - 7/14/2013 11:24:36 PM "but something happened that triggered a series of events."
Yes...Zimmerman got out of his truck after he was told not to...and followed Martin after he was told not to. None of this would have happened if he done what he was told...they told him that FOR A REASON. 11133. anomie - 7/14/2013 11:44:34 PM And then...? 11134. judithathome - 7/15/2013 12:37:11 AM Well, we only seem to have one person left alive to explain it...and the jury believed that was enough. Not strange at all that he was also the one with the gun.
I'm wondering if the 911 people suspected he had that gun...after all, they'd spoken with him 46 times in the past and maybe that's why they told him to stay in his truck. 11135. anomie - 7/15/2013 12:49:39 AM I think what happened next was self-defense, but I have absolutely no proof of that. The state has no proof otherwise, and the burden is theirs. Do you wantto revise that concept? Many tragic aspects to this case. The loss of life being the greatest. In the end we are all better off that the presumption of innocence prevailed. 11136. anomie - 7/15/2013 12:51:05 AM I think police in some states should assume everyone is packing. Arizona, Nevada, Texas... Maybe every state come to think. 11137. robertjayb - 7/15/2013 12:59:46 AM Arky writes: "That kid's death deserved a hearing."
Yes. Absolutely. And it should have happened promptly in a grand jury hearing for Zimmerman even though as the much-maligned local officers believed, under law, there was no crime. The locals blew the sensitivity/public relations part of their duty.
The delay allowed genuinely aggrieved members of the "community," as well as race-baiters far and wide and hand-wringing media blowhards to raise such a clamor that a state attorney moved in. Being no more political than LBJ or Richard Daley, she caused Zimmerman to be charged and then supervised his prosecution. Neat.
But the law and six courageous women stood between her and a legal brass ring. 11138. anomie - 7/15/2013 1:07:10 AM Yes, and I wanted to puke when she and another of the prosecuters talked about "God" and "prayer"... Cheap pandering. Must be an elected office.
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