jordan0386
Member
I love how the bitch is like "Zimmerman didn't exercise good judgement." His lack of good judgement led to a person's death. Isn't that manslaughter?
Jury didnt believe he was instigator of 'fight' so its not on him.
I love how the bitch is like "Zimmerman didn't exercise good judgement." His lack of good judgement led to a person's death. Isn't that manslaughter?
Well KHarvey's schtick is to remove himself emotionally from most things and inject law even when the initial poster is not discussing the law specifically.
I have seen it time and time again. Then he drags them down into a hole and attempt to pummel them over and over with legalese. Even when the poster explicitly says something unrelated to law KHarvey will keep injecting the legalese or case law into the argument to get into his playing field and then abuse them.
Well KHarvey's schtick is to remove himself emotionally from most things and inject law even when the initial poster is not discussing the law specifically.
I have seen it time and time again. Then he drags them down into a hole and attempt to pummel them over and over with legalese. Even when the poster explicitly says something unrelated to law KHarvey will keep injecting the legalese or case law into the argument to get into his playing field and then abuse them.
I don't think that establishes who started anything. It certainly doesn't do anything to disprove that Martin was on top of Zimmerman punching him.
She also heard Zimmerman say "what are you doing here" and then a scuffle. Why would Zimmerman ask a question then attack? Why wouldn't Trayvon say "I'm walking home asshole"?
Unless you have a way to make evidence into formal logic as well as laws there is no way in hell this would be possible. People write laws and interpret laws. We don't have an automated provable way to ensure that any case comes out correctly and we never will. When a jury is made of a humans, emotions/biases/assumptions will always be part of the case.I think the system should be based strictly on the law, with emotion separated from it. Sadly, this happens too often.
Unless you have a way to make evidence into formal logic as well as laws there is no way in hell this would be possible. People write laws and interpret laws. We don't have an automated provable way to ensure that any case comes out correctly and we never will. When a jury is made of a humans, emotions/biases/assumptions will always be part of the case.
I don't think that establishes who started anything. It certainly doesn't do anything to disprove that Martin was on top of Zimmerman punching him.
She also heard Zimmerman say "what are you doing here" and then a scuffle. Why would Zimmerman ask a question then attack? Why wouldn't Trayvon say "I'm walking home asshole"?
Jury didnt believe he was instigator of 'fight' so its not on him.
Problem is that humans can interpret the word "reasonable doubt" differently. So in general the barrier changes for different people. Hence when juries come in a room they commonly have people who want different verdicts. Then someone dominates the conversation or talks others down until the verdict they want occurs.While I agree, I think if there if is a lack of evidence or any shred of reasonable doubt (and the prosecution fails to do their job), I do not think a jury should ever convict someone, even if they feel its the right thing to do, or if emotionally they feel it needs to happen.
That said, I missed the point of your post with regards to Kharvey. So I apologize.
I was talking about the stuff with vahagn(sp?)Just to summarize, this started when I asked which laws should be changed and how to address the problems people feel are highlighted by this case. Nib responded by saying the self defense laws, and specifically the law regarding the use of deadly force, should be more like other major countries. He listed the UK as an example of that which led to my response and this whole discussion about what the laws in the UK actually say. This started 100% as a discussion about the law.
Problem is that humans can interpret the word "reasonable doubt" differently. So in general the barrier changes for different people. Hence when juries come in a room they commonly have people who want different verdicts. Then someone dominates the conversation or talks others down until the verdict they want occurs.
So what clothes was he wearing that would make him look like he's in a local gang?
I believe on this jury it was B37. I imagine the one to command the room would be the same one rushing to write a book or get on CNN.I was on a jury once on a civil lemon law case. That person was me. I won. lol.
I was talking about the stuff with vahagn(sp?)
I believe on this jury it was B37. I imagine the one to command the room would be the same one rushing to write a book or get on CNN.
Well said.
Don't forget that any charge has to be proven 'beyond a reasonable doubt'.
an all female jury was a big big mistake IMO, then need to alt east a few males on board.
women who live prissy perfect lives never get into school fights who into many scrappy situations.
they need a few men in there with experience of what it is like to grow up as boy in our school system and typical playground scuffles
No, I don't think thats correct.
Neither Gender, nor Race would change much. Well... no Race would have changed some things.
I think it comes down specifically to life experiences, I don't think anyone in the jurors table could seriously relate to Trayvon, maybe I'm oversimplifying it but it comes down to having ever been in Trayvons circumstance.
If anyone of them had been affected by people following them or non-authorities confronting them in a manner like an authority. Maybe, just maybe, they'd empathize with Trayvons feel of fear and confusion and not automatically assume he took a defensive approach because of pride and some reputation he was trying to keep.... :/
Juror B37 referred to #Zimmerman as "George" and #TrayvonMartin as "a boy of color." Pretty much sums it all up. Nice going, Florida.
Because Zimmerman physically attempted to detain him? Zimmerman could ask a question then attack for a variety of reasons, Trayvon turns his back and keeps walking for one?
Trayvon being on top is irrelevant unless your position is he doesn't have rights. The injuries are minor and non life threatening. They're essentially something a lot of people have gotten in a fight at school. I've gotten injuries like that in a fight in middle school before. They're not a reason you pull out a gun and kill someone for.
Trayving having the gun and Zimmerman wrestling it away? sure. Except DNA evidence and Zimmerman's alterations don't corroborate that story. Trayvon punching Zimmerman 25 times? Sure, except injuries don't corroborate that story.
Does Trayvon have an obligation to lose that fight? If he doesn't, why is his murder justified because he was winning it?
The bigger, stronger, more martial arts trained, pursuer, with a lethal weapon, killed an unarmed kid, when the unarmed kid was winning the fight, and this bigger stronger guy sustained a couple minor injuries, and without any visible attempt at fighting back, immediately took out the gun and shot Trayvon. And that is the best case for Zimmerman scenario you can actually accept based on objective scientific evidence.
Another alternate possibility. Trayvon got the upper hand in the fight early on, Zimmerman took out his gun but didn't want to kill Trayvon. He was pointing it at Trayvon as Trayvon was screaming for help, perhaps on the ground as Zimmerman was standing up, Zimmerman got flustered that someone might come out and see what's happening, panicked, and leaned in and shot Trayvon in the heart. That would explain Trayvon yelling for help and sounding like he thought his life was in danger.
Juror B37 "That's the way THEY talk". -> We have to work on this America. This Juror doesn't even realize she is racist.
Juror B37 keeps saying "George said" and "George believed" and "George's rendition..." Extraordinary. George Zimmerman didn't testify.
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I think race clearly has a lot to do with more than "some things". I think it was the determining factor in this case, and considering that chart, it's the determining factor in a great deal many cases. White on Black crimes are acquitted at like 4 times the rate of Black on White crimes (in Stand Your Grand States, i.e. gun rights/conservative states)
I don't think that establishes who started anything. It certainly doesn't do anything to disprove that Martin was on top of Zimmerman punching him.
She also heard Zimmerman say "what are you doing here" and then a scuffle. Why would Zimmerman ask a question then attack? Why wouldn't Trayvon say "I'm walking home asshole"?
For all those who think jury wasnt biased
Tweet today
Wow
Another tweet
She referred to him as "Trayvon" in other segments of her interview. And whilst Zimmerman did not take the stand, he did provide a statement in the form of a letter addressing the court.
All of those scenarios could of happened, but there is no proof. So why should he be convicted?
His version of the fight (at least the final moments) is the only one backed up by evidence. He was being attacked and feared for his life. He was on his back and shot Trayvon in the chest. You can't just say well it could of happened this way without proof.
I can't say for sure what actually went down. I do think he bears some responsibility. But murder 2? I don't see it based on the facts we do know.
I do think he should lose his carry permit, but I am not sure how they can legally take it form him without him being convicted of a crime.
Relevant: Florida woman receives 20 years for firing warning shot to stop abusive husband.
http://t.co/eK1UorHhlm
Absolutely ridiculous. Stand your ground doesn't apply to your house? Florida has a problem.
The juror just seemed to make so many more excuses for Zimmerman's actions. She even admits that she thought Zimmerman went in as the original aggressor, but then the roles flipped and Treyvon didn't want Zimmerman to "get over on him." I had to shut it off at that point, I can read between the lines.
I'm curious would you answer a strangers question who had been following you for the past 3-4 minutes? Why did trayvon need to answer anything zimmerman to say? I'm 28 years old and I don't answer strangers fucking questions when they ask me for money yet alone after they stalked me.
I think all of us thought race did not play a role. We never had that discussion.
Because a judge can easily be bribed lolSo when we say that people are entitled to a jury of their peers, why do we think that that's a good thing?
All of those scenarios could of happened, but there is no proof. So why should he be convicted?
His version of the fight (at least the final moments) is the only one backed up by evidence. He was being attacked and feared for his life. He was on his back and shot Trayvon in the chest. You can't just say well it could of happened this way without proof.
Okay guys, this is a legitimate, non-rhetorical question that I genuinely am curious about everyone's answer. I don't know the answer myself.
How do you feel about the police doing their normal profiling over their radios to find unknown suspects? So, how do you feel about each of the following:
I think we all agree that the last in that list is not an acceptable form of profiling. And most of us probably agree (chime in if you don't!) there's a necessity for the type of profiling in the top item in that list, because even though it's possible for an innocent to get profiled and taken into custody just because they happened to have all the same features, the chances are small enough and the accuracy of the profiling great enough that the utility outweighs the social cost.
- Be on the lookout for a 6'2" white male between the ages of 25 and 35, with red hair and freckles, wearing a green jacket and khakis, and driving a blue Honda.
- Be on the lookout for a 6'2" white male between the ages of 25 and 35, with red hair, wearing a green jacket and driving a blue Honda.
- Be on the lookout for a 6'2" white male between the ages of 25 and 35, with red hair, driving a blue Honda.
- Be on the lookout for a 6'2" white male between the ages of 25 and 35, with red hair, driving a Honda.
- Be on the lookout for a 5'10" to 6'4" white male between the ages of 25 and 35, with red hair.
- Be on the lookout for a white male between the ages of 25 and 35, with red hair.
- Be on the lookout for a white male with red hair.
- Be on the lookout for a white male.
- Be on the lookout for a white person.
- Be on the lookout for a person.
So given that context, I re-pose my question, and I really do want to hear people's opinions: Where along that spectrum does the profiling become unacceptable? And would the environment make a difference? For example, when I was one of two white guys within 100 miles in the Philippines, would the police have been okay to say, "Be on the lookout for a white male?" Or is that type of profiling so inherently wrong that, even given the accuracy of it in my environment, it is still a social cost too great to allow?
Because Zimmerman physically attempted to detain him? Zimmerman could ask a question then attack for a variety of reasons, Trayvon turns his back and keeps walking for one?
Trayvon being on top is irrelevant unless your position is he doesn't have rights. The injuries are minor and non life threatening. They're essentially something a lot of people have gotten in a fight at school. I've gotten injuries like that in a fight in middle school before. They're not a reason you pull out a gun and kill someone for.
Trayving having the gun and Zimmerman wrestling it away? sure. Except DNA evidence and Zimmerman's alterations don't corroborate that story. Trayvon punching Zimmerman 25 times? Sure, except injuries don't corroborate that story.
Does Trayvon have an obligation to lose that fight? If he doesn't, why is his murder justified because he was winning it?
The bigger, stronger, more martial arts trained, pursuer, with a lethal weapon, killed an unarmed kid, when the unarmed kid was winning the fight, and this bigger stronger guy sustained a couple minor injuries, and without any visible attempt at fighting back, immediately took out the gun and shot Trayvon. And that is the best case for Zimmerman scenario you can actually accept based on objective scientific evidence.
Another alternate possibility. Trayvon got the upper hand in the fight early on, Zimmerman took out his gun but didn't want to kill Trayvon. He was pointing it at Trayvon as Trayvon was screaming for help, perhaps on the ground as Zimmerman was standing up, Zimmerman got flustered that someone might come out and see what's happening, panicked, and leaned in and shot Trayvon in the heart. That would explain Trayvon yelling for help and sounding like he thought his life was in danger.
Many people knew he was going to be found not guilty based on the laws and some of you guys are blaming it on the jury?The fact that she so casually says "he learned his lesson" shows just how little she and her fellow jurors valued TM's life. And they say this isn't about race. Give me a break.
What evidence are you relying on that he was being attacked? What you describe is him being in a fight (which is undisputed) and on his back losing (disputed). The word attack depends on who started the fight, which is what the case really hinged on. The person claiming the homicide was justifiable can't be the aggressor. I think you will find most TM supporters will argue that stalking and then chasing down a kid doing nothing wrong was the act of aggression that started the fight. While it was argued back and forth who was on top, it doesn't really matter. The defense's main claim was that GZ stopped pursuing TM and then TM came out of nowhere and attacked him, to which there is zero evidence
Nailed it in so many ways.
Trayvon's biggest mistakes were.
A. Being Black
B. Not carrying a weapon to kill Zimmerman with first.
Sorry state of fucking affairs.
FixedIrrelevant: Florida woman receives 20 years for shooting at husband over an argument.
http://t.co/eK1UorHhlm
.
Fixed
Read up on the case before making comparisons
UK law is based on reasonable fear, not actually sustaining injuries. It says this explicitly in what I quoted for you.
If Martin killed Zimmerman he would be facing first degree murder.
Imagine the headlines: Black teen thug kills innocent neighborhood watchman.
Why don't you read the specific case I was commenting on before you try to belittle someoneWhile you're making a fool of yourself, why don't you go through all these cases as well![]()
Prove to us that this isn't race based. That it really is about the cases themselves and the evidence therein. Because you look like a desperate fool right now ignoring a mountain of evidence over thousands of cases that show a distinct and clear pattern of racial prejudice.
For all those who think jury wasnt biased
Tweet today
Wow
Okay guys, this is a legitimate, non-rhetorical question that I genuinely am curious about everyone's answer. I don't know the answer myself.
How do you feel about the police doing their normal profiling over their radios to find unknown suspects? So, how do you feel about each of the following:
I think we all agree that the last in that list is not an acceptable form of profiling. And most of us probably agree (chime in if you don't!) there's a necessity for the type of profiling in the top item in that list, because even though it's possible for an innocent to get profiled and taken into custody just because they happened to have all the same features, the chances are small enough and the accuracy of the profiling great enough that the utility outweighs the social cost.
- Be on the lookout for a 6'2" white male between the ages of 25 and 35, with red hair and freckles, wearing a green jacket and khakis, and driving a blue Honda.
- Be on the lookout for a 6'2" white male between the ages of 25 and 35, with red hair, wearing a green jacket and driving a blue Honda.
- Be on the lookout for a 6'2" white male between the ages of 25 and 35, with red hair, driving a blue Honda.
- Be on the lookout for a 6'2" white male between the ages of 25 and 35, with red hair, driving a Honda.
- Be on the lookout for a 5'10" to 6'4" white male between the ages of 25 and 35, with red hair.
- Be on the lookout for a white male between the ages of 25 and 35, with red hair.
- Be on the lookout for a white male with red hair.
- Be on the lookout for a white male.
- Be on the lookout for a white person.
- Be on the lookout for a person.
So given that context, I re-pose my question, and I really do want to hear people's opinions: Where along that spectrum does the profiling become unacceptable? And would the environment make a difference? For example, when I was one of two white guys within 100 miles in the Philippines, would the police have been okay to say, "Be on the lookout for a white male?" Or is that type of profiling so inherently wrong that, even given the accuracy of it in my environment, it is still a social cost too great to allow?
![]()
I think race clearly has a lot to do with more than "some things". I think it was the determining factor in this case, and considering that chart, it's the determining factor in a great deal many cases. White on Black crimes are acquitted at like 4 times the rate of Black on White crimes (in Stand Your Grand States, i.e. gun rights/conservative states)
Funny enough I think it's from the young Turks lolWhy is this graph being posted everywhere? Where's the source, the citation, the numbers to back it up?
What evidence are you relying on that he was being attacked? What you describe is him being in a fight (which is undisputed) and on his back losing (disputed). The word attack depends on who started the fight, which is what the case really hinged on. The person claiming the homicide was justifiable can't be the aggressor. I think you will find most TM supporters will argue that stalking and then chasing down a kid doing nothing wrong was the act of aggression that started the fight. While it was argued back and forth who was on top, it doesn't really matter. The defense's main claim was that GZ stopped pursuing TM and then TM came out of nowhere and attacked him, to which there is zero evidence