Saturday, March 24, 2012

Not He Said / She Said;
He Said / He's Dead

The above is from the HuffPo.
President Obama said that if he had a son, his son would look like Trayvon. Presumably he was speaking generally, rather than literally. But even in a general context, he was not that far off the mark. While I couldn't quickly locate a photo of President Obama IN a hoodie, I did find one of him ON a hoodie, that I share here for fun. Of course the Nutjob Gingrich had to call the President's comment disgraceful, criticizing Obama because he didn't apparently make it sufficiently inclusive for the Nut that he meant ALL American kids and adults should be safe. The very dishonest Nutjob did that by omitting to reference Obama's full statement where he identifies the common concern of EVERY American, especially every parent.   Clearly however, as a person of color who himself has on occasion experienced discrimination and suspicion because of being a black man, and a black teen, he can identify with the victim.   Here is what the Nutjob Gingrich had to say, in a vain effort to appeal to his tiny slice of an already small, fearful white old people base.  Clearly the President did not suggest it would be OK if a white teen or a teen of any other gender or ethnicity than Trayvon Martin had been shot.  The Nutjob Gingrich is pandering, as the current crop of GOP Presidential candidates so consistently have done, to racial division and fear of racial preference that would not favor white dominance any longer.  It is the pasty Nut Job playing the reverse race card.  From the Huff Po:

What the president said, in a sense, is disgraceful. It’s not a question of who that young man looked like. Any young American of any ethnic background should be safe, period. We should all be horrified no matter what the ethnic background.
Is the president suggesting that if it had been a white who had been shot, that would be OK because it didn’t look like him. That’s just nonsense dividing this country up. It is a tragedy this young man was shot. It would have been a tragedy if he had been Puerto Rican or Cuban or if he had been white or if he had been Asian American of if he’d been a Native American. At some point, we ought to talk about being Americans. When things go wrong to an American, it is sad for all Americans. Trying to turn it into a racial issue is fundamentally wrong. I really find it appalling.


President Obama now, left, Trayvon Martin right
Rare Photos of Barack Obama (20 pics)
a young  Obama, at a similar age to Trayvon Martin
(thank goodness, he isn't wearing a hoodie, or he
might not have lived to become
the first black President of the United States -sarc.)


from Amazon.com  Cybertela
Cybertela Barack Obama 2012 Sweatshirt Hoodie President Democrat Hoody





The message on a hoodie (or hoody), the human equivalent along with buttons of "bumper sticker think" on cars that I most enjoyed was this one. If you can't see the wording clearly, it says Hope over Fear, with the name of Barak Obama underneath. What we are pushing back against is inappropriate fearfulness in taking the side of Trayvon Martin, in opposing people being racially profiled, in opposing people being victimized by vigilantes under too-loose gun laws. That is what we need to oppose, where we need to push back against conservative paranoia and special interest exploitation for profit of our legislative system.

3 comments:

  1. In what way are WE being racist KR, by acknowledging what even Latino fox News admits is an existing tension between black and Latino minorities?

    I have nothing against Hispanics. I'm unhappy that this particular multi-cultural individual stupidly went gun-happy and stalked and then blew away a good kid who wasn;t doing anything wrong.

    Depending on what you believe are the facts, Trayvon was standing his ground, and Zimmerman was the aggressor.

    That's an impression of an individual, not a group of people, and it is based on what he's done and said, not his ethnicity.

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  2. I would argue KR that we are NOT the ones obsessed with skin color.

    I'm not the person who phoned 911 over stupid non-emergency things like an open garage door, but more pertinent, I'm not the person who reported over and over that only black people in the neighborhood were suspicious, and I haven't made multiple neighbors who were black uncomfortable to go out walking because of my racial profiling.

    You are being silly when you talk about white african americans, when referring to black peopole. It is the census bureau and other statistic collecting entities as well as Hispanics who choose to identify as white hispanic and black hispanic as part of identifying their racial and ethnic heritage.

    There is one reason that Trayvon Martin is dead; he was an unarmed kid being chased by a cop wannabe with anger and alcohol issues in his past, who pursued someone who was minding his own business. I'm not jumping to conclusions, I'm making a provisional observation that is subject to change as new informaiton is provided.Trayvon Martin was suspended for stupid stuff like grafitti; Zimmerman was fired from a security job for being physically violent and aggressive.

    He was not greatly different in height, and Zimmerman was someting like 110 pounds heavier. He appears in the videos to be an individual who is reasonably physically fit.I find it unlikely that his injuries as described would not produce more swelling and some bruising even with medical attention such as an ice pack. He has no bandages of any kind and no sign of something being cleaned in the way that betadine would leave.Zimmerman's famiily have made factually inaccurate and misleading statements so far, such as the assertion that George Zimmerman didn't pursue Martin, or that Trayvon Martin didn't have a final phone call despite the evidence that he did from his cell phone. So of the two sides, so far, Trayvon Martin's is the more credible. That might change, but given that the lead investigator didn't believe Zimmerman and wanted to arrest him, I think that he doesn't have a lot of new information to contribute from his (Zimmerman's ) side. Even his own attorney keeps changing his position re Stand your ground laws as a defense; and the people who have spoken up for him, other than his father, don't appear to actually BE very close to him.

    I will offer you a promise though; if Zimmerman is not proven innocent but also proven to be the real victim, I'll say so here, and assert that I"m wrong - if I AM wrong.

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  3. Ah, KR, don't you understand that innocent until proven guilty is a dictum for the courtroom?

    Public opinion is nothing like a court room verdict. I have no authority other than the right to think out loud as my 1st Amendment right.

    Do you hate the Constitution KR? Are you against the 1st Amendment?

    I have no obsession with skin color; what is your insistence on denying it has a disparate influence? What do you have against being reality based?

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