George Zimmerman, the creepy-ass cracker |
What if George Zimmerman had gotten out of his car and
followed me on that fateful evening? OK, I’m a white 50-something guy. I don’t
usually wear a hoodie (but I do occasionally). I tend toward khakis and polo
shirts. I’m not particularly menacing. So, you think, what possible reason
would Zimmerman have for following me? Well, that’s the point, isn’t it: he
wouldn’t have.
He likely followed Trayvon Martin because Martin looked like
Zimmerman’s idea of a young man up to no good, or, in his own words to the
police dispatcher, one of those “fucking punks.”
But let’s suppose that Zimmerman was feeling unusually vigilant
the evening he sees me walking the streets of the Twin Lakes community and decides
to follow. Trayvon Martin’s girlfriend testified that
Martin told her that he was being followed by a “creepy-ass cracker.” I suppose
this was a case of reverse profiling: Martin assuming bad intentions based on
Zimmerman’s appearance. Of course, I would not have employed the term “cracker”
to describe Zimmerman. I would have
thought, “Who is this creepy asshole following me?”
Following someone is not innocent or neutral
behavior. It is predatory. It is threatening. In a different context we call
it stalking or hunting.
One of the things we learn in Biology 101 is that
under a perceived threat an animal will either fight or flee. Humans are
animals. Our “fight or flight” instinct is hard-wired into us. Most likely, if some
creepy asshole tracked me around a neighborhood, I would challenge him. After
all I’m a white guy in my 50s. Generally I believe that I have the right to be
where I am and act accordingly.
I wouldn’t have been particularly polite or deferential
towards George Zimmerman. “What the fuck are you doing?” are my likely words. Maybe
he identifies himself as the “neighborhood watch.” But he’s not wearing a
uniform, he doesn’t carry a badge, and, in fact, he has no legal authority whatsoever.
I know this and likely tell him to “piss off.” Maybe I threaten to call 911 if
he doesn’t cease & desist, but that’s a white-guy-in-his-50s reaction. Trayvon
Martin wouldn’t have called the cops.
Perhaps the confrontation ends then & there. Or maybe
George Zimmerman doesn’t like his “authority” questioned. He is, after all, the
self-appointed fist of the homeowners association and protector of the
community. He’s carrying a loaded 9 mm automatic pistol. He is empowered. He’s
not a man to be trifled with.
So Zimmerman strides towards me. He’s five feet away, four
feet away, three feet away…I drop down and attempt a two-legged takedown. It’s
a basic wrestling move I learned in 7th grade and practiced a
thousand times. Now we’re rolling on the ground. Things are out of control.
Zimmerman reaches for his pistol, presses the barrel against my chest, and
pulls the trigger. Bang, I’m dead.
It’s worth taking a close look at the timeline for the killing
of Trayvon Martin. As Zimmerman exits his truck against the wishes of the police
dispatcher, Trayvon Martin is on the phone to his girlfriend, telling her he is
being followed by this creepy-ass cracker. The phone call ends about 7:16 PM,
presumably the moment Zimmerman comes upon him. At 7:16:11 PM
there is a 911 call reporting a fight. A gunshot is heard on the 911 recording
at 7:16:55 PM. The fight between this 29 year old adult man and the 17-year old
boy lasts less than a minute. Before another minute has passed a police officer
arrives on the scene, but Trayvon Martin is already dead.
If you believe that my scenario, the one where I am killed by
George Zimmerman, is ridiculous, then the likely “ridiculous” part is Zimmerman
following me in the first place. Everything else is typical of the string of unintended
consequences, the unraveling of reasoned behavior, which often happens when human
beings confront one another and try to decipher each others’ intentions.
And, if you don’t believe that Zimmerman would have followed
me, a white guy in his 50s, then you must also accept that he profiled Trayvon
Martin. That is, he presumed Martin’s malicious intent and my benign intent
based on our appearance.
It’s crazy. George
Zimmerman initiates the confrontation, and then, after things spin out of control
and he shoots Trayvon Martin, he is allowed to claim self-defense. I argue that
he voided any claim of self-defense when he got out of his car to pursue
Martin. Is this really the behavior Florida's "Stand Your Ground" legislation was designed to protect?
As proverbs says, when you sow the wind, you reap the
whirlwind.
Juror B-37 has spoken out publicly. She believes Zimmerman’s
“heart was in the right place,” but he exercised poor judgment. I suppose she
means his intent was to protect the community, and, thus, good & pure. But there is a reason that
police officers go through extensive training before they are issued a badge
and gun. It’s to prevent events like this.
As is often said, the road to hell is paved with good intentions.
What juror B-37 doesn’t acknowledge is that Zimmerman’s
actions were reckless. Because he chose to carry a gun and act like police, he
should be held accountable for his reckless behavior. Whether this is 2nd
degree murder, manslaughter, or some other infraction, I cannot say, but it is
an injustice that he walks away from this trial a free person.