The Conservative Cave
Current Events => General Discussion => Topic started by: Rawlings on July 17, 2013, 09:46:47 AM
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July 17, 2013
By Jeffrey T. Brown
American Thinker
. . . We are forever being told by the left about how awful this country is for anyone who is not white. Blacks are being gunned down in the streets by non-blacks. Except they're not. Muslims are being discriminated against wholesale, and are afraid to leave their homes. Except they're not. Gun owners are violent crazies bent on mass murder, except they're not. Christians are trying to force their religion on us. Except they're not. Tea Party members are racists and violent. I believe the Breitbart reward for evidence of the accusations of tea party racism remains unclaimed, even in this day of cell phone cameras and video.
. . . Once it started to become clear just what sort of young man Trayvon Martin had become in life, it became necessary to portray him with complete and utter dishonesty in death. Instead of being the fully grown 17 year old thug flashing the middle finger, or the trash-talking punk his social media entries show him to be, or the person caught with burglary tools and women's jewelry, or the dope-grower seen in photos, or the guy who punched a school bus driver, we were treated to an endless lie of Trayvon Martin, the sainted child who was only buying Skittles. His younger, angelic face was displayed incessantly, even after more recent photos and exploits surfaced, making clear the left's deceit. Trayvon Martin was not the person the left needed us to believe he was for their new and improved racist murder narrative. Isn't it ironic that Martin turned out to be exactly the kind of person Zimmerman feared was casing his neighborhood?
Read more: http://www.americanthinker.com/2013/07/hate_crimes_indeed.html#ixzz2ZJRRBNaE
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The best summary of this saga as perpetrated on America by the depraved political left.
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Trayvon Martin was not the person the left needed us to believe he was for their new and improved racist murder narrative. Isn't it ironic that Martin turned out to be exactly the kind of person Zimmerman feared was casing his neighborhood?
No, it isn't ironic. I think it's evidence that the leftist narrative on Zimmerman - that this was a testosterone-fueled Rambo wannabe who, for no discernable reason sought out a confrontation with St. Trayvon of Da Skittles, just so it could end the way leftists claim all such confrontations do - is just as big a steaming pile of bullshit as the narrative on the thug Trayvon. I think in reality, George Zimmerman was observant and recognized suspect behavior patterns and body language when he saw them, which is why he stuck on Trayvon's case, instead of letting the cops deal with it when they got around to it.
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...when they got around to it.
And there's the rub.
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No, it isn't ironic. I think it's evidence that the leftist narrative on Zimmerman - that this was a testosterone-fueled Rambo wannabe who, for no discernable reason sought out a confrontation with St. Trayvon of Da Skittles, just so it could end the way leftists claim all such confrontations do - is just as big a steaming pile of bullshit as the narrative on the thug Trayvon. I think in reality, George Zimmerman was observant and recognized suspect behavior patterns and body language when he saw them, which is why he stuck on Trayvon's case, instead of letting the cops deal with it when they got around to it.
Apparently, the events were more at. . . .
When informed that the police were on the way and that he should return to his vehicle, Zimmerman said, "Okay."
Then the operator asked, "Where is he [Martin] now?"
Zimmerman didn't know because Martin was now out of his line of sight. Zimmerman turned and briefly walked in the direction in which he had last seen Martin, got sight of him again, reported that and then headed back toward his car. In other words, there was an unintentional conflict of instruction here and an attempt to comply within the framework of that conflict.
We know from the forensic evidence, gun powder residue and the bullet's trajectory for starters, that regardless of what transpired between the two after Zimmerman turned again and headed back toward his car, Zimmerman was on the ground face up with Martin on top of him when Martin was shot and killed.