Posted on 08/27/2013 1:15:54 AM PDT by 2ndDivisionVet
Times like these test the Reverend Martin Luther King, Jr.s powerful pronouncement that the arc of the moral universe is long, but it bends toward justice. Trayvon Martins shooting death by George Zimmermans gun, the difficulty with which he was brought to trial and his subsequent acquittal on all charges have justifiably generated a maelstrom of anger and confusion. These events clearly constitute a deep miscarriage of justice. What is less clear is whether this miscarriage operates only in an especially unmistakable corner of the realm of immorality, a place which is deeply unsatisfying for its formal unenforceability. The public outcry at every stage of this morbid saga has been a heartening reminder that Dr. Kings lifetime of sacrifice was not in vain the tradition he championed of collective civic action in the name of ameliorating injustice has clearly survived, as citizens continue to recognize that they must actively maintain whatever moral progress has been wrought in our nations tumultuous history.
But the moral universe is imprecisely monitored by the rigidity of the legal system. The same energetic activism which has forced this case into the national consciousness and galvanized a wide-ranging abstract discussion of morality must be turned toward more earthbound legal details. Reforming statute may lack the glamour and neat gratification of punishing a perceived bigot for his obviously evil deed. But failing to do so would mean squandering a unique opportunity to more closely align the moral and legal universes in order remove the ambiguity that ultimately sanctioned Zimmermans homicide. We will never know the exact sequence of events that precipitated the struggle culminating in Trayvons death. As the law stands, the way these events unfolded is crucial to assigning legal culpability despite Zimmermans own admission that he murdered the unarmed teenager. Reforming the law, then, rather than seeking to nail Zimmerman to a punishment that may not actually exist, is essential to achieving justice.
Stand Your Ground laws exist in various iterations in nearly half of the 50 states. Floridas criminal code holds that a person who is attacked has no duty to retreat and has the right to stand his or her ground and meet force with force, including deadly force if he or she reasonably believes it is necessary to do so to prevent death or great bodily harm to himself. The threat this law poses to justice is twofold: First, in privileging the shoot-first mentality which escalates conflicts everywhere the law stands, and second, in requiring juries to accommodate the unbelievable ambiguity SYG laws entail. Though we may never know in our heart of hearts how racist Zimmerman is, and punishing him for this suspected prejudice is (rightly) legally impossible, we do know that gun carriers like him in SYG states are emboldened by the knowledge that they can initiate, escalate and violently terminate conflicts. Thus, their version of the events will be the only surviving one if they have a true enough shot. Its far easier to convince a jury that you were in real danger when the only other interested party is dead.
Meanwhile, privately-held prejudices can be acted upon and embellished into legitimate sounding defenses when examined in the context of such a non-standard of justifiable violence. A recent Urban Institute study found that in states without SYG laws, black-on-white homicides were only found to be justified 1.2 percent of the time, while white-on-black homicides were justified in 11.4 percent of reviewed cases. The disparity grows in SYG states, where juries are called upon to make judgments on ambiguous criteria which are more susceptible to subjectively held preconceptions: Black-on-white homicides were found justified in 1.4 percent of cases (a statistically insignificant increase), while white-on-black justified homicides jumped almost 50 percent, to 16.9 percent of reviewed cases. As before, its impossible to prove that the racial disparity in homicides deemed justified is the result of juror bigotry. But to rely on such a subjective standard for determining culpability (what seems a reasonable threat of harm is different for different people) is to deny that consciously or subconsciously-held biases (racial, sexual, it doesnt matter) can pervert juror perception and fill in for evidence-based review. Abolishing SYG laws would remove this ambiguity.
The dense and tragic history of American racism starkly illustrates the fact that racial prejudices are deeply personal and widely social phenomena that cannot be comprehensively addressed by the law. But it is well within the responsibility of the law to eliminate ambiguities which give these deeply personal prejudices room to operate in the realm of legal permissibility. Earlier this month, Trayvons parents courageously recognized this by initiating a petition on Change.org calling on the governors of every state with SYG laws to review and amend them. Changing statute as controversial as SYG laws is slow work; powerful vested interests have screwed their considerable money and influence, if not their courage, to the sticking place. Adding your name to the list will be a crucial first step in bending the legal universe back toward the moral.
*******
Sam Kuhn is a senior in the College of Arts and Sciences. He may be reached at skuhn@cornellsun.com. His column appears alternate Tuesdays this semester.
This kid must get paid by the word.
Fatuous.
Sam Kuhn, to see racism, go look in the mirror.
They are confused because they are morons. They are angry because they are unthinking beasts.
City of Evil PING
Yes, they do. But not the way the writer seems to think.
Zimmerman should never have been charged in the first place.
The Media should not have distorted the appearances of the people involved in order to try to make this a racial issue. (how many people still think Trayvon was just this shiny faced smiling 13 year-old, instead of a 6 ft+ tatooed gangsta wannabe?
Media should not have blurred out Zimmerman's injuries to make it look as if he was unharmed in the incident.
Media neglected to report little Trayvon's unexplained possession of stolen jewelry and "burglar tools" in school.
So yes, there is a definite miscarriage of justice, perpetrated by the media and the race pimps in this country, who continue to double down on their once erroneous, now malicious (could one say "racist"?) deeds.
“Sam Kuhn is a senior in the College of Arts and Sciences.”
Soon to be found at Starbucks.
“They are confused because they are morons. They are angry because they are unthinking beasts.”
Wow. That would make a great tagline.
He smells more like an Obamacare Navigator, followed up with an entry-level community organizer gig at ACORN.
Soon to be found at Starbucks.
Which side of the counter?
What do SYG laws have to do with Trayvon Martin?
Actually, wasn’t he trying to “pound his ground” with George Zimmerman’s cranium?
Depends on whether he gets a job serving the coffee, or mopping the floors.
Cornell ought to be ashamed that it let this moron manage to make Senior.
But then, that’s not possible. Cornell is without shame.
10-4
The Stupidity and deliberate twisting of the facts ... It Burns!
Lie
He admitted to shooting Traydmark, but that isn’t necessarily murder, now is it? By the time George gets through suing all these miscreants, he should have no further financial worries.
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