When you look at him sitting in that courtroom seemingly showing no emotion at all after killing Trayvon Martin, it makes you wonder just who George Zimmerman really is.

Trayvon Martin did not initiate an attack on Zimmerman. Therefore, Trayvon had every right to try and protect himself from Zimmerman, who was not wearing a uniform of any kind.

If Zimmerman were really acting correctly and in a professional way in his role of Neighborhood Watch captain – instead of acting out on his prejudice toward a black man walking in his neighborhood, who he felt did not have the right to be there – none of this would have happened.

From all accounts, Trayvon was just walking in the neighborhood. What Zimmerman may not know is that just because a black person walks slowly and appears to be looking in a house window he is not necessarily a suspect. I can recall back in the day, black people of lesser means riding or walking through upscale neighborhoods as a Sunday afternoon excursion and admiring the homes of the ones more fortunate than them.

Zimmerman had every opportunity to let Trayvon know that he had a gun, which makes it very hard for one to believe that Zimmerman was screaming for help. Why do you need to scream for help when you have a gun in your possession?

George Zimmerman was enjoying his role as the aggressor, and there was nothing that was going to stop him from getting his man. George Zimmerman’s desire to be a policeman and his grandiose way of thinking caused the death of an innocent 17-year-old child.

Zimmerman’s mindset is very questionable when you take into consideration the testimony of his neighbor, Jonathon Milano. Milano testified that as Zimmerman was being handcuffed, he dropped his cell phone on the ground and asked his neighbor to call his wife. Milano called Zimmerman’s wife and was explaining what happened when all of a sudden Zimmerman told him, “Just tell her I shot someone,” as if Milano was taking too long with the conversation.

You would tend to think that someone in Zimmerman’s stressful situation would have some concern about how this news would impact his wife.

Now we hear the defense coming out with the idea of Trayvon circling around and attacking Zimmerman. If this is true, then why did Trayvon Martin not have the same rights as George Zimmerman to protect himself by all means necessary from someone acting strange and creepy and following him when he had done absolutely nothing wrong?

Unless, of course, you consider being black and walking in Zimmerman’s neighborhood a crime punishable by death.

Leave a comment

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *