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Luis Miguel Goitizolo

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RE: ARE WE NOW IN THE END TIMES?
7/14/2013 4:43:37 PM

Zimmerman not guilty: Victory for new kind of civil rights era?

Christian Science Monitor

Part of America sees the not guilty verdict in the George Zimmerman case as a travesty of justice, a modern iteration of Jim Crow, where a white man walks free after shooting an innocent black person, in this case an unarmed Floridateenager named Trayvon Martin.

Another part sees in the verdict the emergence of another kind of civil rights movement, a gun freedom movement ultimately tested in the Zimmerman trial by a state willing to forego hard evidence in order to try to prosecute what police originally deemed an open and shut self-defense case.

Prosecutors in the case said Zimmerman had evil in his heart and that he crossed legal boundaries when deciding to follow an innocent Trayvon before shooting him on a rainy February night last year. Zimmerman supporters, though, say he was providing a civic duty in a post-9/11 America, where safety and crime concerns have become paramount even as overall crime rates have dropped to historic lows.

RECOMMENDED: How much do you know about the Trayvon Martin case? Take our quiz.

The overarching theme of the Zimmerman trial and its verdict is the way it points to an emerging “siege mentality” that’s driving Americans apart, to the point where Trayvon and Zimmerman traded blows and gun fire instead of respectful inquiry, writes Charles Ray, a Sanford resident, in a verdict response in Yahoo! News.

Yet in much of the post-verdict debate, the issue comes back to the anxious interaction between race and guns, fueled for many by black-on-black killings in places like Chicago as much as the alleged profiling by Zimmerman when he decided to follow Trayvon Martin for no other reason than he looked, at least to Zimmerman, like a criminal.

Some commentators say the shooting, the publicity and the eventual trial highlighted a sort of cultural settling, and perhaps sunsetting, of the civil rights movement (the Supreme Court declawing the Voting Rights Act came in the run-up to the trial}, at a time when society is tackling more vigorously the new frontier of liberalized gun and self-defense rights.

“The public conversation about race tilts toward a more enlightened attitude about civil rights, but the conversation about guns is extremely conflicted, regional, socioeconomic, and divided in every conceivable way,” Austin jury consultant Doug Keene told the Monitor last month. “This year, for all the tragic reasons we’re aware of, gun policy has become a constant presence … in our neighborhood conversations, and the lack of agreement on correct policy about guns is going to be one of the legacies of this trial.”

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To be sure, civil rights icons like Dr. Bernice King, the Rev. Martin Luther King, Jr.’s daughter, Tweeted that the verdict would be a gauge on the state of equal rights in America. In a mass reaction to an early decision by Sanford police to not charge Zimmerman, civil rights activists had mentioned Trayvon in the same breath as Medgar Evers and Emmet Till, young black men whose violent deaths fueled the civil rights movement and eventual passage of equal rights legislation in the mid-1960s.

“If u really believe racism isnt a massive problem, that the oppression of minorities is not a horrific and systemic issue … U R in denial,” Tweeted the actress Ellen Page.

At times, prosecutors seemed to be trying to answer an existential question instead of providing necessary facts to prove guilt beyond a reasonable doubt to the jury.

“What is that when a grown man, frustrated, angry, with hate in his heart, gets out of his car with a loaded gun and follows a child?” prosecutor John Guy asked the six jurors – all women, five of them white – before they began a 16-hour deliberation that ended late Saturday night. “A stranger? In the dark? And shoots him through his heart? What is that?"

But while the big picture visuals of the case echoed past civil rights battles, others believe the George Zimmerman trial instead may bolster the bold assertion by the National Rifle Association that ending persecution of lawful gun owners by the state is the new “civil rights movement.”

“A Zimmerman acquittal will be bad news politically to the gun prohibition lobby, which is also anti-self-defense,” writes Dave Workman for Examiner.com. “Gun grabbers do not like it when armed citizens defend themselves, demonstrating one case at a time that guns in the right hands are good, and dead criminals pose no further threat to the community. Recent years have seen an increasing number of people successfully using guns in self-defense with no criminal charges, a scenario that seems to elicit revulsion or stony silence from the gun control crowd.”

Zimmerman supporters say the state overreached, putting hate in Zimmerman’s heart, where there was none. Instead, they say, he was a would-be public servant who cared about his neighborhood, and the people in it – whether black or white. On the night of Trayvon’s death, however, Zimmerman bucked neighborhood watch protocols to follow Trayvon, whom he had pegged as suspicious and, under his breath to a dispatcher, likened to “punks” that “always get away.”

But whatever his motives and potentially questionable actions, Zimmerman was a legal gun owner who had the right to get out of his car in his own neighborhood and poke around. The jury also said he had a full right, under Florida law, to defend himself with deadly force if he felt in fear of his life.

“Death is unfortunate, a byproduct of returning force with appropriate force,” said Robert Zimmerman, Jr., George Zimmerman’s brother, to CNN’s Piers Morgan. “The jury saw the blood, they saw what Trayvon Martin did to my brother.”

Of course, many of those involved in the trial see the verdict as the opposite of justice for Trayvon, punctuated by what they perceive as the bitter taste of racism, particularly when it comes to how critically society views young black men.

“We’re intellectually dishonest if we don’t acknowledge the racial undertones of this case [and questions it raises] about how far we have come in America in matters of equal justice,” said Ben Crump, the Martin family’s attorney, after the verdict.

Yet while the specter of racial profiling and institutional indifference to the plight of a black boy drove myriad “Justice for Trayvon” rallies and protests, the trial itself rarely mentioned race.

Indeed, the presiding county judge, Debra Nelson, excluded the term “racial profiling” from the trial. One of the few mentions of race included Trayvon’s view of Zimmerman as a “crazy-ass cracker,” a racial term for poor whites, uttered by Trayvon as he spotted Zimmerman, according to his friend, Rachel Jeantel. The two were on the phone until the moments before Trayvon was shot.

Angela Corey, the special prosecutor who arrested Zimmerman 44 days after Trayvon’s death, said after the verdict that the debate outside the courtroom didn’t always match the procedural and legal wrestling match in Courtroom 5D.

"This case has never been about race or the right to bear arms," Ms. Corey said. "We believe this case all along was about boundaries, and George Zimmerman exceeded those boundaries."

For now, George Zimmerman “no longer has any business” in front of the criminal courts, as the judge put it, though the US Justice Department said Saturday that it’s considering a plea from the NAACP to file civil rights charges against Zimmerman. In that way, the tension between expanded gun-carry rights and profiling may not have been fully resolved for George Zimmerman, at least.

“The department continues to evaluate the evidence generated during the federal investigation, as well as the evidence and testimony from the state trial,” a spokesman for the Justice Department said in a statement.

Given that juries aren’t privy to any evidence or conjecture beyond what the judge allows, the Zimmerman trial proved to some that courtrooms aren’t ideal venues to resolve deeper societal prejudices, whether against minorities or gun owners.

These kinds of trials “can … never fully answer the larger societal questions they pose,” writes Andrew Cohen, in the Atlantic. “The can never act as moral surrogates to resolve the national debates they trigger.”

Police in Sanford, meanwhile, said they will return the Kel-Tec 9mm pistol used to kill Trayvon Martin to George Zimmerman.

RECOMMENDED: How much do you know about the Trayvon Martin case? Take our quiz.

Related stories

Read this story at csmonitor.com

"Choose a job you love and you will not have to work a day in your life" (Confucius)

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Luis Miguel Goitizolo

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RE: ARE WE NOW IN THE END TIMES?
7/14/2013 4:48:20 PM

3rd victim in SF crash: 15-year-old Chinese girl

In this Saturday, July 6, 2013 aerial photo, firefighters, lower center, stand by a tarpaulin sheet covering the body of a Chinese teen struck by a fire truck during the emergency response to the crash of Asiana Flight 214 at the San Francisco International Airport in San Francisco. The girl was hit by a fire truck while covered with firefighting foam, authorities said Friday, July 12, revealing a startling detail that suggested she could have survived the crash only to die in its chaotic aftermath. (AP Photo/Marcio Jose Sanchez)

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SAN FRANCISCO (AP) — The third person to die from injuries suffered when an Asiana Airlines jetliner crash landed in San Francisco was identified as a 15-year-old Chinese girl who attended school with the other two victims.

San Mateo County Coroner Robert Foucrault on Saturday confirmed the identity of the third victim as Liu Yipeng.

He said that she was rushed to San Francisco General Hospital with head injuries after the July 6 crash and died there Friday morning.

Chinese state media said she attended school with the two 16-year-old girls who also died in the crash.

Liu Yipeng's identification comes a day after her death was announced amid the official confirmation that one of the other girls who died in the disaster had been covered on the runway in flame-retardant foam and hit by a fire truck speeding to the crash site, a disclosure that raised the tragic possibility she could have survived the crash only to die in its chaotic aftermath.

Police and fire officials confirmed Friday that Ye Meng Yuan was hit by a fire truck racing to extinguish the blazing Boeing 777.

"The fire truck did go over the victim at least one time. Now the other question is, 'What was the cause of death?'" San Francisco police spokesman Albie Esparza said. "That's what we are trying to determine right now."

All three girls killed were from China.

Ye Meng Yuan's close friend Wang Linjia was among a group of injured passengers who did not get immediate medical help. Rescuers did not spot her until 14 minutes after the crash. Wang Linjia's body was found along with three flight attendants who were flung onto the tarmac.

Moments after the crash, while rescuers tried to help passengers near the burning fuselage, Wang Linjia and some flight attendants lay in the rubble almost 2,000 feet away. A group of survivors called 911 and tried to help them.

Survivors said that after escaping the plane, they sat with at least four victims who appeared to be seriously hurt. They believe one of them was one of the girls who died.

Cindy Stone, who was in that group, was recorded by California Highway Patrol dispatchers calling in for help: "There are no ambulances here. We've been on the ground 20 minutes. There are people lying on the tarmac with critical injuries, head injuries. We're almost losing a woman here. We're trying to keep her alive."

San Francisco fire spokeswoman Mindy Talmadge said Friday that when airport personnel reached the group near the seawall, Linjia was dead. She did not know when the girl had died.

Several flight attendants remain hospitalized.

Talmadge also confirmed that an Associated Press photograph of a body under a yellow tarp near the burned-out jet was Ye Meng Yuan.

The photo, taken from above, shows firefighters looking down at the tarp, and there are truck track marks leading up to it.

Police said the teenager was covered in foam that rescuers had sprayed on the burning wreckage. When the truck moved while battling the flames, rescuers discovered her body, Esparza said.

"The driver may not have seen the young lady in the blanket of foam," said Ken Willette of the National Firefighter Protection Agency, which sets national standards for training airfield firefighters. "These could be factors contributing to this tragic event."

He said fire trucks that responded to the Asiana crash would have started shooting foam while approaching the fuselage from 80 or 100 feet away. The foam was sprayed from a cannon on the top of the truck across the ground to clear a safe path for evacuees. That was supposed to create a layer of foam on the ground that is several inches high before the truck gets to the plane.

The victims were close friends and top students, looking forward to spending a few weeks at a Christian summer camp in California, where they planned to practice English and boosting their chances of attending a U.S. college.

Their parents were flown to San Francisco after their deaths where the Chinese consulate was caring for them.

The crash-landing occurred after the airliner collided with a rocky seawall just short the runway. Dozens of passengers were hurt. There were 182 survivors taken to hospitals, though most suffered only minor injuries.

So far, an investigation indicates the pilots, a trainee and his instructor, failed to realize until too late that the aircraft was dangerously low and flying too slow.

Nothing disclosed so far by the National Transportation Safety Board investigators indicates any problems with the Boeing 777's engines, computers or automated systems.

Also, San Francisco airport officials said that the runway where the jet crashed was reopened Friday evening, and all airlines would resume normal schedules immediately.

"Choose a job you love and you will not have to work a day in your life" (Confucius)

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Luis Miguel Goitizolo

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RE: ARE WE NOW IN THE END TIMES?
7/14/2013 9:17:00 PM

DOJ urged to press civil rights charges against Zimmerman


Zimmerman reacts to the not guilty verdict, July 13, 2013. (Reuters/Pool)


The NAACP, the Rev. Jesse Jackson and other civil rights activists are calling on the U.S. Department of Justice and Attorney Gen. Eric Holder to press federal civil rights charges against George Zimmerman, the former neighborhood watchman who was acquitted by a Sanford, Fla., jury Saturday in the shooting death of 17-year-old Trayvon Martin.

“The most fundamental of civil rights — the right to life — was violated the night George Zimmerman stalked and then took the life of Trayvon Martin," NAACP President Ben Jealous wrote in a letter to Holder shortly after the verdict was announced. "We ask that the Department of Justice file civil rights charges against Mr. Zimmerman for this egregious violation. Please address the travesties of the tragic death of Trayvon Martin by acting today.”

“This verdict represents a tragic miscarriage of justice," Barbara Arnwine, president of the Washington, D.C.-based Lawyers’ Committee for Civil Rights Under Law, said in a statement. "Yet, there is still the potential for justice to be served through a civil suit brought about by Trayvon Martin’s surviving family members, and also through civil rights charges being brought against Mr. Zimmerman by the Department of Justice."

The Justice Department, which launched a probe of the Zimmerman case last year, released a statement Sunday afternoon.

"Experienced federal prosecutors will determine whether the evidence reveals a prosecutable violation of any of the limited federal criminal civil rights statutes within our jurisdiction, and whether federal prosecution is appropriate in accordance with the Department's policy governing successive federal prosecution following a state trial," the statement read.

In a keynote speech at Al Sharpton's National Action Network convention last year, Holder — the nation's first African-American attorney general — said, “If we find evidence of a potential federal criminal civil rights crime, we will take appropriate action. And at every step, the facts and law will guide us forward.”

But he cautioned in subsequent public comments that there is a “very high barrier” when seeking to bring federal charges in such cases.

A Justice Department official told CNN late Saturday night that it "continues to evaluate the evidence generated during the federal investigation, as well as the evidence and testimony from the state trial."

On Sunday, Jackson called on the Justice Department to "intervene" and “take this to another level.”

"I remain stunned at the decision," Jackson said on CNN's "New Day." "That the grown man, armed, murdered the unarmed boy going home."

[Related: Zimmerman not guilty: Newspapers react to verdict]

"I think that we clearly must move on to the next step in terms of the federal government and in terms of the civil courts," Sharpton said on MSNBC Saturday. "Clearly, we want people to be disciplined, strategic. This is a slap in the face to those that believe in justice in this country."

"The trial happened, the verdict came in," Sharpton said on "Meet The Press" on Sunday. "That does not exhaust the legal options of this family, and the bigger community issues of civil rights. We now have a position on the books, in the State of Florida, where an unarmed teenager who committed no crime can be killed and the killer can say self-defense. That is dangerous. That is an atrocity. And I think that must be addressed. I think every American ought to be afraid that, 'My child can do nothing wrong and be killed, and you can use self-defense,' and tell four or five different stories that end up being inconsistent, and still walk away."

Eliot Spitzer, former New York governor and attorney general, called the verdict a "failure of justice."

"An innocent, young man was walking down a street, was confronted by a stranger with a gun and that innocent, young man was shot," Spitzer said on "This Week With George Stephanopoulos" on ABC. "The criminal justice system should be able to deal with situations like that. It didn't."

The Justice Department, Spitzer added, is "in a very dicey position because there has been a criminal case. Double jeopardy is a fundamental principle in our American judicial system, as it should be. And so it's going to be hard for them to come back at the defendant, and, boy, this is just, understandably, a hugely emotional moment for many people who say, 'That could have been my kid. It could have been my son.'"

Some Republicans, though, criticized the administration for inserting itself into a state-level crime.

"The evidence didn't support prosecution and the Justice Department engaged in this, the president engaged in this and turned it into a political issue that should have been handled exclusively with law and order," Iowa Rep. Steve King said on "Fox News Sunday."


Video: George Zimmerman Civil Suit Could Be Next

"Choose a job you love and you will not have to work a day in your life" (Confucius)

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Luis Miguel Goitizolo

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RE: ARE WE NOW IN THE END TIMES?
7/14/2013 9:32:21 PM

NAACP 'Outraged' Over Zimmerman Verdict; Reid and McConnell Spar Over Immigration


NAACP 'Outraged' Over Zimmerman Verdict; Reid and McConnell Spar Over Immigration

NAACP President Ben Jealous told CNN's Candy Crowley that his team has been in contact with the Attorney General's office, but he doesn't expect the Justice Department to act until the end of the any civil suits that result from George Zimmerman's not guilty verdict. "If this moves to a civil case, they will review everything that comes out in that and then they will make a choice about whether or not they will pursue criminal civil rights charges. We are calling on them to do just that," Jealous said on CNN's State of the Union. Jealous said he was "outraged" and "heartbroken" over the verdict. But, ultimately, Jealous believes the Justice Department will be able to make a case for civil rights charges. "When you look at (Zimmerman’s) comments…there is reason to be concerned race was a factor," he said.

RELATED: All Sides Think They're Losing the Jobs Debate

On Fox New Sunday, the attorney for Trayvon Martin's family, Darryl Parks, wouldn't explicitly say whether the family supports the NAACP seeking federal civil rights charges from the Justice Department. "The beauty of our country is that we have several tiers of government, several aspects of laws and that different times different aspects apply," Parks said. "Different laws apply at different times, different places apply at different times. That would be a different arena."

RELATED: It's All in John Boehner's Face: Fiscal Cliff Not Yet a Fiasco!

Meanwhile, some elected officials were crowing on the Sunday shows about how George Zimmerman never should have been prosecuted in the first place. Iowa Republican Rep. Steve King blamed the Justice Department and President for politicizing the case on Fox News Sunday. "The evidence didn't support prosecution, and the Justice Department engaged in this. The president engaged in this and turned it into a political issue that should have been handled exclusively with law and order," he said. King also contended that the case was "turned into a race issue by the media." Really smart take, Steve, thanks for sharing.

RELATED: Snowe Won't Vote for the Ryan Medicare Plan, Either

The Rev. Al Sharpton said he was confidant a civil rights case would emerge eventually from the DOJ during his appearance on NBC's Meet the Press. Sharpton said that "clearly there are grounds for civil rights charges" in the Zimmerman case, and that he and the Martin family already met with U.S. attorneys. "The trial happened. The verdict came in. It does not exhaust the legal options of this family and the bigger community issues of civil rights," he said. "We now have a position on the books in the state of Florida where an unarmed teenager who committed no crime can be killed and the killer can say self defense." Sharpton warned that the implications of this verdict should scare all parents, not just black ones. "Every American ought to be afraid that my child can do nothing wrong and can be killed," he said.

RELATED: Senate Dems Urge Obama to Take Least Unconstitutional Option on Debt Limit

Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid briefly weighed in on the Zimmerman verdict during his Meet the Pressappearance "I think the Justice Department's going to take a look at this. This isn't over with, and I think that's good, it's our system. It's gotten better, not worse," he said. But he was there mostly to call out Speaker of the House John Boehner for not letting the bipartisan Senate immigration bill be voted on in the House. "They will act. They have to," Reid said. "This is something that the vast, vast majority of Republicans, Democrats and independents support, and John Boehner should let the House vote. That's all he has to do. If the House voted, it would pass overwhelmingly." Reid also responded to some recent criticism the bill was facing from right-wing thought leaders who were urging Boehner to kill the bill. "We have the Chamber of Commerce, conservative groups all over America running ads telling Republicans, vote for this," Reid said. "This is a good bill. It gives us security on our border, and it gives people who are here a pathway to citizenship…It saves the country a trillion dollars. It's good for the economy. Not a billion. Not a million. A trillion."

RELATED: The One Where Mitt Romney Showed Up


"Choose a job you love and you will not have to work a day in your life" (Confucius)

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Luis Miguel Goitizolo

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RE: ARE WE NOW IN THE END TIMES?
7/15/2013 12:42:29 AM

Some Sanford residents struggle to cope with Zimmerman verdict

Demonstrators react to the verdict outside Seminole County Court where George Zimmerman was found not guilty on second-degree murder and manslaughter charges in Sanford, Florida July 13, 2013. A Florida jury on Saturday found George Zimmerman not guilty in the shooting death of unarmed black teenager Trayvon Martin, in a case that sparked a national debate on race and guns. REUTERS/Joe Skipper

Liz Goodwin, Yahoo! News

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SANFORD, Fla. — Under the hot Florida sun the morning after George Zimmerman was found not guilty, Kathy McGill stood next to a brick monument adorned with the names of 10 local young people who had been shot or stabbed to death. The name at the top of the monument, located in the center of Sanford’s historic black neighborhood of Goldsboro, was Trayvon Martin. Next to Martin’s name was the date of his death: February 26, 2012.

McGill never knew Martin, a Miami boy who was visiting his father when he was shot by Zimmerman, but she did know two of the other people listed on the monument — Travares McGill and Corey Donaldson. Since the community put the plaque of names up nearly a year ago, at least two other Sanford kids have been killed.

News of last night’s verdict was greeted with disappointment and some anger in this neighborhood, as residents said they believed police do not adequately respond to violence in their part of town and that justice is not meted out equally. A jury of six women affirmed Zimmerman’s argument that he feared for his life when he shot the unarmed, 17-year-old Martin in a nearby gated neighborhood.

“It makes me feel like if I’m in need of justice, I won’t win,” McGill said of the verdict. “I thought it would be better.” A young man passing by overheard McGill and asked, “How’s it self defense if it don’t apply to me?”

Previous murders weigh heavily on the minds of residents, though those killings received far less media attention than the Martin case. Donaldson, a talented musician at his local church, was gunned down in a shooting rampage at his friend’s home in 2011. Travares McGill, then 16 and McGill’s nephew, was shot in 2005 by a security guard who said McGill was trying to run him over in a parking lot .

“It never seems like they try to solve the murders in the urban areas,” McGill said. “When Trayvon Martin was gunned down, they thought he was just anyone. But he wasn’t.”

Some said they hoped the small central Florida town of 50,000 residents will change for the better because of the Martin case, which sparked a discussion on race and the justice system, as well as self- defense laws. Despite the predictions of a handful of pundits, the verdict was received with calm and no violence in the area.

Lottie Edge, whose children were friends with Dominique Stafford, a 17-year-old stabbing victim whose name is among those on the monument, said she thinks justice has been served.

“I’m a little disappointed, but not really surprised,” Edge said of the verdict. “The parents just wanted justice for their son. They wanted him to have his day in court and that’s what happened.”

In the weeks after Martin's death, tens of thousands of people marched in the city to demand Zimmerman be arrested and charged, bolstered by the NAACP and other civil rights groups and leaders. But Saturday's not guilty verdict has turned up only a handful of small protests, many organized by outside groups.

The communist group Revcom organized a small protest at Fort Mellon Park on Sunday evening that drew about 30 people. A Fort Myers woman, Irene Smith, said in a megaphone that she was disappointed the protest was not larger. "It's a lot of people in Sanford but look how few is here," she said. "I see so many people sitting on their porches when they should have been headed here." One spectator murmured in agreement. "Call it out!" he said.

Some Sanford leaders are not ready to give up the fight, however. Valarie Houston, pastor of Allen Chapel Church just down the road from the monument, gave a fiery sermon dedicated to Martin and his family Sunday morning. Houston helped lead the protests in the area that prompted the police to arrest and charge Zimmerman in Martin’s death, 44 days after the shooting.

The wood-paneled, modest chapel was only about half full with congregants, many of them wearing matching red T-shirts. Houston said a prayer thanking the Lord for sending Trayvon Martin “as a sacrifice for all of us.” She said his death revealed “injustices that lie in Sanford” and that he gave “his life to protect the youth who will come after him.”

The congregants gave a standing ovation to a young church member who recited a speech she wrote about why Martin is innocent.

Kim Brown, a Sunday school teacher at Allen Chapel, said her middle school-aged students all wanted to talk about the verdict during their morning Bible session. Two of the children had been at the Seminole County Courthouse with their parents when the decision was announced late Saturday night.

“All of them had the same opinion,” Brown said of her students. “They felt it was unfair and unjust.”

“As children it’s hard for them to totally comprehend, it’s overwhelming,” Brown said, adding that she told them it’s time to move on and come together as a country.

Some of the children said they felt scared by the verdict, and worried that they had to be extra careful when walking around outside. “They said, 'we do know we have to be careful.' I wish it wouldn’t have to happen that way but that’s how they feel,” Brown said.

The Sunday school teacher reassured her students. “Let’s just take it as it is. This is just how it is,” she told them.


____________

MY NOTE: I just cannot understand how a jury could find George Zimmerman "not gilty" of the murder of Trayvon Martin. The fact is, nothing would have happened if Zimmerman had stayed in the car. He was armed, the boy was not. He started the fight, how could he claim self-defence? Yet he did, and the jury apparently complied. I only hope this is not the beginning of something bigger.


"Choose a job you love and you will not have to work a day in your life" (Confucius)

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