George Zimmerman

3 posts

This Affects Us All

Michael Dunn has been convicted on three counts of attempted second-degree murder. The conviction follows an altercation in which he fired into a car following an argument over loud music with the occupants. While the trial didn’t generate the same media coverage as the Zimmerman case, it’s still national news. It’s also still a problem for us.

There are three parallels to the Zimmerman case. The first is race. We don’t know that it was a factor in Dunn’s decision to open fire, but it’s going to come up anyway.

The second is the media focus on Florida’s “stand your ground” law, despite the fact that it’s not relevant. Neither Dunn or Zimmerman ever requested a pretrial hearing in accordance with the law. Both men allowed their legal counsel to run the case in front of a jury. Nonetheless, there’s a groundswell of activism to repeal those laws, and Shannon Watts (now funded by Michael Bloomberg) is taking point on the initiative.

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Zimmerman, Again.

George Zimmerman was just an upstanding law-abiding sort of guy who was minding his own business when he was attacked without provocation. At least that’s the story his supporters would have us believe.

I’ve never really bought that, and there’s evidence to the contrary. As far back as 2005, he was ordered to take anger management classes. Since his acquittal earlier this year, he’s taken few pains to stay off the radar. In September, he and his estranged wife had a falling-out involving the police, and today he was arrested on domestic violence charges involving his current girlfriend.

Somebody explain again how this guy is a poster child for gun owners in any shape or fashion.

In Which I Piss Everybody Off

Gun folks love a hero. They want a hero so badly they’re willing to put anyone up on that pedestal, no matter how troubling.

Case in point: George Zimmerman. He couldn’t exercise a little discretion by staying in his car and letting law enforcement do their jobs. He had to be Neighborhood Watch Hero, and now his future hangs on the line while attorneys from both sides hump a mannequin on national television.

We’ll never know exactly what happened in those few seconds leading up to the fight and the ensuing gunshot. Sure, we know what Zimmerman says, and we know what the lawyers say, but that’s not necessarily the truth. A criminal trial isn’t about truth; it’s about selling a story to a jury in order to get a verdict.

Sure, maybe statute says you can shoot if X happens. Maybe that guy I met who took a class from a guy who used to know a cop said I can shoot if Y happens.

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