General Discussion
In reply to the discussion: What about Trayvon's right to stand his ground? Finally, CNN asks the right question. [View all]JDPriestly
(57,936 posts)and caught up with me, I would have screamed and not waited for him to attack me.
As a woman, I probably would have kicked. Had I been a boy and a football player, I would have tackled the person who was so clearly following me.
I can understand from what I know about the facts that Trayvon would have thought that Zimmerman was a criminal, perhaps a sexual deviate.
What else would you think.
And I do not believe Zimmerman's story. It is just not how things work. Zimmerman stalked Trayvon in my view. Zimmerman may not have thought of it as stalking, but that is what it was. And why would Zimmerman have been afraid of Trayvon no matter what Trayvon did when Zimmerman knew all along that he had a gun, a loaded gun at his waist.
I'm surprised the gun did not go off and shoot Zimmerman in the leg or hip. How would that work?
Yes. If you carry a gun outside your home on the street (not hunting) on a dark night where there are not many people, in a state with stand your ground laws, it's like having a license to kill.
There have been a number of shootings in my area over the past year and a half. For the most part, they have occurred at night or in the evening on the street when almost no one was around. My state does not have stand your ground laws to when they catch the killer that is not an excuse. Virtually all these shootings were gang member against gang member. But who is to say, in a stand your ground state, even a gang member would have the right to plead stand your ground and get off. It's an insane law.
The limitations on self-defense laws in murder cases developed over many years and should not be set aside. They were developed because judges and populations saw that protecting people who do not have or carry guns from those who do is just. Those who have or carry guns have such an advantage in a confrontation or misunderstanding with one who does not have or carry a gun, that justice demands that the burden of keeping the peace be placed on one with a deadly weapon. The same principle obviously applies to a driver who kills a pedestrian. The car is a deadly weapon. That the pedestrian knocked on the hood of the car does not give the driver the right to plow into the pedestrian.
Had Zimmerman not been carrying a gun, he probably would not have followed Trayvon. That is my opinion.
We will probably see in this trial that stand your ground laws give too great an advantage to the killer. Already, when there are no witnesses, or the witnesses only saw part of a scuffle and shooting, the defendant has a huge advantage because the proof of guilt must be beyond a reasonable doubt. Stand your ground in addition to all the advantages that the legal system affords gun-toting defendants is not necessary. It is a license to kill.
If Zimmerman is not convicted, I think my opinion will be frequently voice by others.