Thursday, July 18, 2013

Society Guilty in Trayvon Martin Murder



By Troy Foster

Like all of you, I’ve heard so much about the verdict in the George Zimmerman case.  So many people are passionate on both sides.  On one end, the argument that justice should be served when a kid minding his own business gets gunned down by an overzealous neighborhood watchman.  Logical.  Compelling. On the other, someone who is getting beat up by a stranger in a neighborhood that has had recent criminal activity, and fears for his life should be able to defend himself.  Also logical.  Also compelling.

There are a lot of side issues out there.  Did the prosecution fail to present the case?  Was Trayvon yelling or was it Zimmerman?  Or both?  Was Trayvon the aggressor?  Or was he just defending himself after being followed by who he thought was a creep?  Should Stand Your Ground and other laws be changed?  And the list goes on.

I don’t pretend to know the answers to these questions.  But, one thing that I’m convinced of is that all of these questions are distractions.  Distractions from the fundamental question – What happens to our pure, loving, trusting kids?  They are color blind, they aren’t afraid of each other – there isn’t fear.  I see this everyday in my family; my sons (one black, one white) love each other.



So, what happens?  Why do people fear others because of how they look?  I don’t even dispute that George Zimmerman was afraid; if he was, why?  I don’t dispute that Trayvon reacted in a way that made Zimmerman more afraid and that Trayvon was probably afraid.  But why?

Because we taint them.  All of us.  We are so wrapped up in our own worlds that we don’t make it a point to relate to people that aren’t in our circles.  Our concern, our empathy and compassion don’t extend as far as they should.  And our kids learn that.  If we were, scenes like Sanford would unfold differently.  The George Zimmerman in that world would have asked the boy if he was lost or needed directions; and the Trayvon would have respectfully answered “no thanks sir, just heading to my dad’s.”  The end.

We can deal with the distractions – change the laws, protest the justice system, bring federal charges, criticize Trayvon, Zimmerman, the prosecution, the witnesses, and argue about what really happened.  But all of that won’t change the real problem.  It won’t eliminate the fear – in fact, this will probably just exacerbate it.

To reach any solution, no one is going to be right.  And we all have to work together – in educating our kids and learning from them (see that love above).  The minute we forget that we all cry the same tears, laugh the same laughs, feel pain and joy the same – so do our kids.