15 July 2013. A World to Win News
Service. The acquittal of George Zimmerman, the
gun-carrying neighbourhood vigilante who murdered the Black teenager Trayvon
Martin, sent waves of anger rolling across the U.S.
During the hours while the jury was
deliberating the case, vigils and rallies were held in many American cities to
await the verdict. The jury accepted Zimmerman's argument that he shot Martin in
self-defence. As soon as the judge told Zimmerman he could take back his gun and
walk out of the courtroom a free man on the night of 13 July, marches,
demonstrations and other forms of protest broke out, including in Sanford,
Florida, the small Southern town where the killing took place.
That night there were major protests in
San Francisco, Oakland and Los Angeles in California; Chicago, Illinois;
Atlanta, Georgia; Washington; Harlem, New York; and many other places. The
following day some 5,000 people marched through various parts of Manhattan,
gathering support as they went.
As described by Revolution,
newspaper of the Revolutionary Communist Party, USA, "At times the march went
against the traffic, people walking between the cars as drivers honked in
support. People chanted, 'We are all Trayvon Martin' and 'No Justice, No Peace'.
Started by revolutionaries, hundreds took up the chant 'The whole system is
guilty' on their own. As the march went through the crowded streets of Manhattan
into Times Square, many of the onlookers cheered in
agreement.
"The marchers were an incredibly diverse array of people
– young and older, from the 'hood, including hard-edged youth, along with people
of all nationalities. For many, this was their first political action. There
seemed to be a pleasant surprise among many Black people that many white people
had come out to demonstrate.
"Protesters filled the streets of Times Square with
thousands of tourists taking pictures and video recording the march. A rally was
held in the middle of Times Square with people climbing on top of five-foot-high
garbage containers with a bullhorn. Twice revolutionaries addressed the crowd,
calling on people to resist this open season on Black and Latino youth… pointing
to the reality that stopping outrages like the murder of Trayvon Martin, the
slow genocide against Black people, and all the system's crimes once and for all
requires revolution, nothing less… and calling on people to get into Bob
Avakian. At one point, several hundred people continued the march, heading for
Harlem."
Following are excerpts from an article on the eve of the
trial, before the verdict. "Lies, Slanders... and the
Cold-Blooded Lynching of Trayvon Martin" appeared in the issue of Revolution
dated 14 July. (www.revcom.us)
************
Trayvon Martin was a Black teenager
gunned down by a vigilante killer just after 7 pm on the evening of February 26,
2012. He was walking to his father's house with a can of ice tea and a bag of
candy.
George Zimmerman knew nothing about
Trayvon Martin, never even heard of him. But he thought he knew him. All
Zimmerman had to see was a young Black man in a hoodie [hooded sweatshirt]
walking home with a snack, and he "knew" that Trayvon Martin was a "suspect". He
"knew" Trayvon Martin was a "fucking punk." He "knew" Trayvon was "a fucking
asshole" who "always gets away with it."
And based on that, Zimmerman got out of
his car, stalked Trayvon Martin, pressed a 9mm pistol into Trayvon Martin's
sweatshirt right at his heart. He fired a hollow-point bullet into Trayvon's
heart, killing him nearly instantly.
Zimmerman never showed any remorse for
killing Trayvon Martin. Not when he pulled the trigger. Not when he told police
over and over again – without any basis – that Trayvon was "the
suspect". Not when directly asked if he would change anything if he could, in a
TV interview that was played in court. In that TV interview, Zimmerman claimed –
obscenely – that it was "god's will" for him to kill Trayvon
Martin.
And through this all, Zimmerman has
acted as if he has a whole system behind him. For good reason. The Trayvon
Martins of this country (and this world) have been branded suspects by a system
that has no future for them. From endless depictions of them as thugs on TV and
in the movies, to the institutionalized criminalization of them through
"stop-and-frisk", to the schools-to-prison pipeline to mass incarceration, they
are a generation for whom this system has no future.
But Trayvon Martin was a human being! He
had a right to live, to have a future, and so do millions like him. And so the
stakes of this trial are truly decisive to the kind of world people will live
in.
Zimmerman's self-exposure
As the prosecution presented its case in
this trial, over and over it has been revealed how Zimmerman coldly murdered
Trayvon. Evidence has come out that Zimmerman got out of his car, followed
Trayvon when the non-emergency dispatch operator told him not to, lied to the
dispatch operator to cover his tracks as he stalked Trayvon, and shot Trayvon
Martin point-blank through the heart.
This was Zimmerman's state of mind: He
saw a Black youth he "knew" was up to no good. Zimmerman chased Trayvon down
with malice, and shot him straight through the heart knowing this would kill him
and then afterwards gave a narration like a proud wannabe cop killing a
"perp"[police slang for a criminal]. In his statement to the cops he referred to
Trayvon repeatedly as the "suspect"when in fact it was Zimmerman who was taken
into custody for killing Trayvon! And the police who "interviewed"Zimmerman
shared that mentality, not challenging him on this.
Some truth emerges in court
Prosecutors ended their case on Friday,
5 July. There was testimony as to statements Zimmerman made to police, and
testimony of a close friend of Zimmerman's who wrote a book justifying the
murder of Trayvon Martin. Through this material, as well as other statements he
has made that were reported in the press, Zimmerman's versions of what happened
that night were revealed to contradict each other, and to be full of
lies.
Prosecutors also called several
witnesses, most notably Rachel Jeantel who was on the phone with Trayvon Martin
for much of the time he was being stalked and followed by Zimmerman. She
testified to Trayvon's fear of his stalker and his efforts to get away from
him.
Rachel Jeantel testified in court that
during this call Trayvon told her he was being stalked by a strange man – a
"creepy-ass cracker" [racist white] as she said Trayvon called him. She told the
court that Trayvon told her he was going home, and never said he was going to
confront the man following him.
Zimmerman had gotten out of his vehicle
in pursuit of Trayvon despite instructions not to from the non-emergency
dispatcher. He was armed with a loaded 9-mm handgun.
During this time, Rachel Jeantel
testified that she advised Trayvon to run. He replied he was walking fast.
Rachel said the last thing she heard Trayvon say was "Get off, get off". Then
their connection cut off. Rachel Jeantel, as she told the court, was the last
person to speak to Trayvon Martin.
When police arrived on the scene,
Trayvon Martin was lying face down on the ground, bleeding to death from the one
blast that tore Trayvon's heart open. The dead body of Trayvon Martin was tested
for drugs; Zimmerman never was. Zimmerman was taken into police custody. Five
hours after he shot and murdered Trayvon Martin, George Zimmerman was released
by Sanford police with no charges filed. The next morning, Tracy Martin,
Trayvon's father, was notified that his son had been killed the previous
night.
These are facts
established by the public record, documented by phone logs and recordings,
corroborated by the testimony of key witnesses, in particular Rachel Jeantel.
George Zimmerman saw Trayvon Martin, picked up his gun, got out of his car
looking for the "fucking punk" he didn't recognize. Then he found Trayvon, and
shot him dead.
Lies, confusion, and distortion from the defence
Any witness who in a significant way
stood in the way or challenged the fable of Trayvon as a thug who assaulted
Zimmerman, and Zimmerman as the watchman protecting the neighbourhood, was
subjected to a barrage of hateful vitriol and ridicule in the courtroom, and
gutter-level attacks on social media.
This was most true of Rachel Jeantel,
Trayvon's friend since grade school, who was talking on the phone with him when
Zimmerman began stalking Trayvon. Rachel Jeantel's testimony is some of the most
substantial in this case, and she is one of the more credible witnesses. The
time and length of her phone calls with Trayvon as he walked towards his
father's home are well documented, and they corroborate most closely with all
the available evidence. And these are precisely the facts that are "lost"or
"forgotten" in much of the media commentary on Rachel that has focused instead
on her appearance, her demeanour and her attitude.
Rachel Jeantel stood up to hours of
badgering, haranguing, and insult, and then to attacks waged on social media.
What kind of legal system – what kind of
social system – would heap such abuse on a young woman who comes forward
to testify to the truth about what she knows of the murder of her friend? As
Revolution wrote last week, bullies who act like this in the courtroom or
in society generally are "trained to act and react by a system, to spew their
ignorant venom full of the confidence of someone who feels they have power on
their side."
The vilification of Trayvon began in the
mass media and on social media shortly after his murder. At that time, Sybrina
Fulton, Trayvon's mother, said "even in death, and Trayvon is gone and not
returning to us, they are still disrespecting my son, and that's a shame. The
only comment I have right now is that they've killed my son, and now they're
trying to kill his reputation." The hateful, racist atmosphere has intensified
and expanded during this trial.
Here are two basic facts of life in the
U.S.A., 2013 – youths like Trayvon Martin are murdered by police, and even by
racist vigilante killers like George Zimmerman; and tens of thousands of youths
like Trayvon Martin are put into prison year after year by this system that has
no future for them.
What made the murder of Trayvon Martin
different from the murders of other Black and Latino youth was that
despite the police treatment of Trayvon's murder as legitimate
self-defence by George Zimmerman, despite the fact that no charges were
immediately filed against Zimmerman, despite the treatment of this case
in the Florida media as "just another killing of a Black youth who was somewhere
he shouldn't have been", the story of a 17-year-old kid wearing a hoodie who was
shot down while he was walking to his father's home with a soft drink and a bag
of candy became national news – and a focus of national outrage and
protest.
In 1955, Emmett Till, a 14-year-old
Black youth from Chicago was lynched by white men while visiting relatives in
Mississippi. His body was horribly mutilated, weighted with a 70-pound fan, and
dumped in the Tallahatchie River. The killers were not
charged.
Emmett's mother, Mamie Till,
courageously insisted on an open casket at her son's funeral, so people could
see what had happened to him. The widespread outrage and anger that spread
throughout the country over the savage death of Emmett Till became a spark that
catalysed thousands of people in a growing struggle to end the injustices
perpetrated on Black people.
The cold-blooded murder – the modern-day
lynching – of Trayvon Martin also sparked deep and widespread outrage throughout
U.S. society. And now we're at a crucial turning point in the struggle for
Justice for Trayvon.
As a recent Revolution editorial
put it, right now "the situation in the world, and in this country, is very
intense. There is the potential for eruptions 'in the routine' of one kind or
another." Mass incarceration of Black and Latino people, especially youth;
relentless assaults on women and in particular on the right to abortion;
continuing wars and occupation, and new revelations of massive government
spying; all this and much more is part of a "cauldron of
contradictions"confronting the rulers of this capitalist-imperialist
system.
The battle for justice for Trayvon
Martin is framed by that bigger picture – and it has the potential to alter that
picture – if people ACT. It can mark a big step towards the day when no
longer are people like Trayvon Martin and his friend Rachel Jeantel treated like
part of a "generation of suspects" – Black youth who people in this society are
conditioned and trained to look at as "fucking punks". People who can be hunted
down and shot, and the police sweep it away like its just another day on the
job.
As Revolution wrote recently,
society is polarizing around the murder of Trayvon Martin and the trial of
George Zimmerman, and "this growing struggle must be repolarized into
broader energy, clarity, and direction for Justice for Trayvon Martin... and for
revolution and emancipation altogether." The need to act on that understanding
is more urgent than ever.
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