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TransGriot Note: Renee's got a fresh post up, and this latest Womanist Musings one is her comments on the Zimmerman case from her above the 49th parallel vantage point as a Canadian.
I awoke this morning to discover that George Zimmerman has been
acquitted of second degree murder in the shooting death of Trayvon
Martin. I wasn't in the least bit surprised because for as long as I
have been alive, Black life has been cheap. It's a hard truth, but it's
the reality with which I live, with which all children of the African
Diaspora live. The phrase "I Am Trayvon Martin" has become very popular
and this is because he literally could have been any of us. Some worry
that this verdict will embolden racists to target Blacks, but I wonder
when have we ever not been a target? From chains to a Black president,
Blackness continues to be under assault.
I find the only thing that brings me even the slightest bit of relief is
the fact that I am Canadian and my sons are Canadian. At 12, Destruction
is five foot five and would not look much different from Trayvon in the
same circumstances. Like all mothers, I worry about his safety, but
our much more rigid gun laws would more than likely mean that no
neighbourhood watch cop wanna be, would take his life for simply
existing. The glorification and absolutely masturbatory fascination
Americans have with guns, combined with a White supremacist culture,
which purposefully criminalizes and cheapens the lives of Black children
before they can even take their first breath, are directly responsible
for the violent unnecessary murder of Trayvon Martin.
Being a Canadian, I watched the circus of a trial unfold from a
distance. There are most certainly large differences in American and
Canadian law, though we share a symbiotic relationship in many ways, but
what I saw before me was a farce. George Zimmerman may have been
accused of murder, but it was Trayvon Martin who went on trial. How is
it that the person who ended up dead, and therefore unable to speak for
themselves was criminalized? We learned about pictures of Trayvon Martin
holding guns, about THC in his system and suspensions from school. It
was not long before he was turned into a drug dealing thug, who
Zimmerman graciously saved the world from having to deal with. What I
want to know, is how is any of this is relevant to what happened that
fateful night? Zimmerman would have known none of this as he approached
Trayvon, in direct contradiction of police instructions. The only thing
that Zimmerman knew for an unequivocal fact, is that Trayvon Martin was
Black.
He purposefully stalked Trayvon, creating a situation which ended in
death but somehow he is not culpable? Had Zimmerman only listened to the
911 dispatcher, Trayvon would be alive today, but in a world in which
every Black person is born a threat, Zimmerman felt emboldened to act.
Even after the fact, he could not admit the mistake he made and instead
we had to listen to some cooked up story about self defense. How can
someone claim self defense, when they started the situation to begin
with? If Zimmerman felt in true peril, it is only because he is a
racist. Zimmerman benefited from a system which has no interest in
justice for people of color. Stop and Frisk Laws as well as the Stand
Your Ground Law under which Zimmerman got away with murder, exist only
to oppress and criminalize Black and Brown people.
You would think that after the controversial verdict of not guilty had
been delivered by the all White jury that the Zimmerman family would
finally let Trayvon rest in peace, but the character assassination
continued on Pierce Morgan. In a discussion regarding Trayvon's actions
the night he was slain, Robert Zimmerman told Morgan and Lemon:
"I want to know if it's true, and I don't know if it's true, that
Trayvon Martin was looking to procure firearms, or growing marijuana, or
looking to make lean."
This is what Robert extrapolated from a hoodie and a packet of
sweeties. How can this be rational? Yet, we had White conservatives
celebrating and calling it a defeat for the supposedly liberal media.
Lost in their zeal is the anguish of yet another set of Black parents,
who have lost their beloved child forever and the fear of Black parents
across the diaspora that their child could be next.
I say child, because that is what Martin was and the only reason he was
not perceived as such is his race. Can you imagine an all White jury
arriving at the same not guilty verdict, had the victim been a White kid
from the suburbs and the perpetrator Black? No one would even have
had to rally for an arrest had that been the case, let alone watch this
farce of justice that supposedly represented a trial. Was there ever
any hope of justice with a jury of all White women - women who have been
raised to see Black males as the predator who jumps out of the bushes
to harm them - women who have been indoctrinated to believe that only
their children have value?
Slowly this story will slip off the front pages of newspapers and the
networks will end their round the clock coverage, moving onto yet
another tragedy that they can report on. The coldness of the grave does
not bring ratings like sensationalism. The only people who cannot walk
away, who cannot forget, are those who knew and loved Trayvon. For them,
this will be a never ending nightmare because not only did they not get
justice, they cannot get their loved one back. They don't even have
the cold comfort of believing that Trayvon's death will lead to change
because this trial has proven soundly that he is just another, in a long
list of Black youths, whose lives and deaths are meaningless in a White
supremacist world.
posted by Monica Roberts at 12:00 AM on Jul 18, 2013
"In The Aftermath Of George Zimmerman's Release"
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