Okay, so...it gets worse......
So Zimmerman's defense was based on Florida's Stand Your Ground law. Before Stand Your Ground laws, if you were in a physical conflict the law would expect you to try and find some way out of the conflict (retreating) before resorting to deadly force (so-called "standing your ground"). Under the Stand Your Ground law, you have no legal responsibility to avoid escalating a conflict with violence.
So when Zimmerman first murdered Trayvon Martin (again, this guy saw a teenager walking home at night, followed him, called the cops and told the dispatcher he was sick of "these guys getting away with it" jumped out of his car, confronted the teenager and then shot and killed him. And those are the facts. I am skipping all the he said-she said bits where there are no witnesses and I'm just stating the factual timeline) the police refused to even investigate the case because of Stand Your Ground Laws.
So guess what happened next? Yup. You guessed it. People were PISSED. African American communities all over the country rose up, demanding a full police investigation into the death--again, the death of a god. Damn. Child.
But when Zimmerman finally got his day in court he was acquitted. And why? Because Florida self-defense laws are so overboard they literally legalize murder.
But Trayvon Martin was a spark, and when people all over the country saw someone hunt and murder and teenager and then walk away a free man, they started wondering why and the answer for many seemed to be race. People began paying closer attention, and the people who had been paying attention began to get angry, and things snow-balled and got bigger and bigger until we have the Black Lives Matter Movement.
The BLM movement gets a bad rap, and I can understand how some people might be intimidated by them. My grandmother once told me that if you look at a protest march the first people you see will be the angriest, loudest, most extreme voices, because those people will be at the front of the march, screaming and banging drums and shaking their fists. And if you're not careful, they're the only ones you see. Especially if you just interact with the movement through the media because the media elevates the loudest voices anyway. But they are not alone, and the people you need to pay attention to are the ones who come afterwards, the quiet everyday people who don't want to burn the world down and are just there to fight for the people they love.
So BLM gets a bad rap, because there are some loud, aggressive, powerful voices that make people uncomfortable. But they are not alone. Every BLM event I've ever been to--whether it was a speech, or a rally, or a workshop, or whatever--the families with small children have outnumbered the radical youths two to one. If you look in the media, you only see angry young protesters facing off with riot cops. But the reality is that the Black Lives Matter Movement is mostly ordinary people desperate to keep their loved ones off the evening news and trying to figure out how to do that.
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