Hygro
soundcloud.com/hygro/
Lexicus stop being ableist against people with rage disorders and profiling proclivities.
No signs of violence against Martin were found during his autopsy/autopsies though, so an actual attack by Zimmerman is very, very unlikely. He might still have grabbed him to keep him in place or something, but that once again, while not okay in itself, does not justify an attack, and it does not mean that Zimmerman did not act in self defense.
Pure misdirection... and its obvious why you've switched to this tack. But even still, your argument is fundamentally flawed. Essentially you're arguing that all the historical prejudice and institutional mistreatment of black people has been the work of the Democrats alone, and I (Sommerswerd) along with other black people have been nevertheless supporting them, voting for them all along, so its my/our (black people's) fault... which is utterly preposterous. So... about that, one at a time:Sure... Democrats
I didn't vote for those Democrats, nor did any black person cause we weren't allowed to vote back then. George Washington wasn't a Democrat, he supported slavery because he owned slaves, and I didn't vote for him, nor did any black person for that matter. So your point in bringing that up is preposterous and debunked. On to the next one...Democrats supported slavery
I didn't vote for those Democrats, and probably nor did any black person because, among other factors the Klu Klux Klan wouldn't let us vote. Certainly no black person who is alive today voted for them. So again, bringing that up in the context of the point you are trying to make is completely nonsensical and irrelevant... ie debunked. On to the next one...Democrats replaced slavery with Jim Crow
Wrong, that was Nixon, as has already been pointed out. But more importantly and more relevant to the flawed argument you are trying to make... I didn't vote for those Democrats, nor did most (any) black people alive today... so again, the point you are trying to make is completely debunked.Democrats replaced Jim Crow with a drug war...
Something I forgot to mention about this... Anyone who has ever lived in a neighborhood which was hit hard by the housing crisis (I have), knows that when you live in a neighborhood with a lot of vacant homes (like Zimmerman's neighborhood), you have TONS of random people showing up all the time in your neighborhood, peeking in windows, walking around in the yards, checking out the houses, testing the doors to see if they're open, even looking in the windows of occupied homes to see if they're vacant or not.
There is no absurdity here, one case is self-defense against immediate danger, one is not.Just highlighting the absurdity here. Note that in the scenario I consider acceptable someone might get bloodied but they don't die, whereas in the scenario you deem acceptable someone bleeds out on the pavement.
Yeah, for the person who is on the receiving end of the action, but not for whether it's appropriate self-defense or not.Of course it does. The difference between getting shot and getting beaten up is quite consequential.
His past would come in as further evidence against him if there were actual signs of physical violence on Martin, but there are none, so he clearly has not gotten physical with him. It is perfectly possible that he wanted to get physical, but Martin robbed him of that chance by attacking him. There's no way for us to know, so if in doubt, assume innocence. Well, you're free to assume guilt if you want, but it's built on nothing but an assumptions.But of course, that is the case, because we know that Zimmerman initiated the entire situation by profiling Martin and then stalking him. You may think the domestic abuser who had been previously arrested for getting physical with a cop had intentions pure as the driven snow when he started following Martin around carrying a loaded handgun, but those of us who aren't murderous racists clearly see otherwise.
Yeah, admittingly I should have phrased that differently. If somebody grabs you then of course you can take whatever measures you need to take to stop them from doing that. Throwing somebody to the ground and beating them in the face does not seem to me like it's a response that is meant to accomplish that, it's an attack of your own that simply doesn't stop at getting them off your clothes. Which, again, is a reaction I can even understand on some level. But you're clearly escalating the situation far above what it was before, into territory where lethal force to defend oneself from the damage that is to be expected becomes an option.Hold up...he might have grabbed him to keep him in place (I'm not saying he did, just going with your hypothetical) which you admit is "not okay in itself." Then you go on with that not "justifying an attack."
In your world just what do you expect happens if you grab some passerby to "keep them in place"?
Just having somebody follow you around is not.
but not for whether it's appropriate self-defense or not.
Yeah, admittingly I should have phrased that differently. If somebody grabs you then of course you can take whatever measures you need to take to stop them from doing that. Throwing somebody to the ground and beating them in the face does not seem to me like it's a response that is meant to accomplish that, it's an attack of your own that simply doesn't stop at getting them off your clothes. Which, again, is a reaction I can even understand on some level. But you're clearly escalating the situation far above what it was before, into territory where lethal force to defend oneself from the damage that is to be expected becomes an option.
But again, that's still in the hypothetical situation where Zimmerman even grabbed him, we have no evidence that he did that.
In the hypothetical situation it might be closer to that, yeah. See my response to Timsup2nothin.But having someone to 'grab you to hold you in place' clearly is.
Law must work differently is Lala-Land then, because here in Germany, killing somebody in self-defense is fine as long as you were on the receiving end of violence and saw it as a way to end that violence without an obvious, safe alternative, even if that violence was not intended to kill you.Yes it is. This is just another example of you attempting to abstract from reality to win internet points. Not gonna fly amigo.
I mean, I am sympathetic to that argument, but the implications of assuming the worst are that you can just go overboard whenever there is a way you can make a case that you felt threatened.We also have no evidence that he didn't, but neither here nor there.
Within the hypothetical there might be a bit of "Americanism" in our differing viewpoints. If someone grabs me, they have demonstrated the willingness to have a physical confrontation, and given the widespread availability of firearms in America they have also demonstrated the willingness to risk a lethal confrontation because they don't know if I am armed. I take neither prisoners nor risks. The only way I walk away from this demonstrably violent person is if they are sufficiently incapacitated that they cannot pull out any gun that they might have and shoot me. Either they will be beaten into unconsciousness or I will stomp both their hands, or most likely both.
So, yes, I think throwing them to the ground and beating them in the face is appropriate in the hypothetical circumstances, given that we are talking about America.
I mean, I am sympathetic to that argument, but the implications of assuming the worst are that you can just go overboard whenever there is a way you can make a case that you felt threatened.
That's the problem with self-defense, you either have a standard that is too high to catch all actions where a person has legitimately and justifiably been afraid for their well-being, or you have a standard that is too low to punish people who reacted to situations that weren't actually situations where self-defense was necessary. No matter what standard you choose, you will have a standard that's not ideal for all cases.
That's why I say I see why Martin might have felt that he had to defend himself, even if Zimmerman only followed him around. I would certainly feel that way myself. But part of self-defense laws much be to discourage people from just assuming the worst and acting on it.
Not that it matters in this case anyway, ultimately, whether Martin felt like he acted in self-defense is not of great relevance to whether Zimmerman's response to Martin's actions was self-defense in itself. What is of relevance is whether Zimmerman was looking for a physical confrontation, and whether he instigated the violence, both of which we do still can't tell for sure either way.
"Could you not have just stayed in your truck, and even driven off if he came at you?" would put him squarely in the cross hairs.
that doesn't seem like a reasonable standard to me. That could only be a useful question in situations where the expected outcome is that you create a situation where you have to defend yourself, but that's not the case here. The expected outcome of following or even confronting somebody is not to have that person attack you. It's a possible outcome, especially if you go into the situation with an aggressive mindset, but it's not the obvious thing to happen, so this can clearly not be seen as a situation where he provoked an attack.
Because that doesn't seem like a reasonable standard to me. That could only be a useful question in situations where the expected outcome is that you create a situation where you have to defend yourself, but that's not the case here. The expected outcome of following or even confronting somebody is not to have that person attack you. It's a possible outcome, especially if you go into the situation with an aggressive mindset, but it's not the obvious thing to happen, so this can clearly not be seen as a situation where he provoked an attack.
Killing somebody in self-defense is not "issuing a death penalty" though. It's protecting oneself from harm in the immediate situation.Under normal laws regarding self defense "well, I didn't expect my confrontational actions to provoke a confrontation" is not a question that is relevant to the standards. What matters isn't expectations, what matters is results. Someone DIED here. That's the end result. Someone who may or may not have committed crimes, may or may not be a reasonable person to suspect, but certainly had not committed any crime warranting the death penalty. So a normal self defense regulation is going to start from that point and work from "what did you do to avoid this bad result?"
Well again, maybe that's just a difference in how we view the ethics behind all of that, but no, I heavily disagree with that.You are sort of riding on "I didn't expect this result so I didn't take any action to avoid the outcome but let me off anyway." That is not openly ridiculous, but you would have to convince a jury that it was unreasonable for you to expect any consequences when you followed a guy you thought was maybe a criminal, and that is going to be a steep hill to climb. Because if it was reasonable to expect there could be a confrontation, and you took no actions to avoid it, your self defense plea goes down in flames.
Shot through the heart... and logic is to blame... concise and irrefutable. Well stated Hygs, take a bow.Wait a second, if you think you're following a criminal you would be reasonably expecting to get attacked, ergo a confrontation. If you think you're following a not-criminal, wut in the first place...?
No it most certainly is not the same thing, because Trayvon didn't "steal Zimmerman's purse". Trayvon hadn't stolen anything, or committed any crimes whatsoever. And your hypothetical captures the problem exactly, which is that Trayvon's race, and Zimmerman's pre-existing prejudice towards Trayvon's race made Zimmerman conclude that he had in-fact stolen something or intended to. The problem is that since Trayvon was black, racial prejudice makes "stole my purse" implied. And this:It's the same thing if somebody steals your purse and you realize it and run after them, but then you run off the main street and next thing you know, they're on top of you, punching you. Just because you ran after them does not revoke the status of self-defense.
is just more of you doing the same thing... doing what Zimmerman did... ie skipping the factual reality that Trayvon was not commiting any crimes and assigning guilt just based on the fact that he was a black stranger. Trayvon had not "violently smased windows with stones" or "destroyed stuff" or "stolen from someone's shop"... but Zimmerman was stalking him anyway, for literally no reason except his own irrational racial prejudice.if somebody is violently smashing your windows with stones, you see that and yell "Hey, stop that!", you've just given up your right to plea self-defense for everything that follows, because "What outcome did you expect yelling at the person who's angrily destroying your stuff?" - or if a person is stealing from your shop and you see them do it, confront them, be attacked and have to defend yourself.
Man now I remember that part in GTA: San Andreas's political talk show about killing illegal immigrants in the backyard issue.fixed that for you.
Take it easy... I added some substantive discussion about your post.Yes, yes.. circlejerking about one-liners that criticize imperfect formulations, that's how reasonable people discuss issues.
Killing somebody in self-defense is not "issuing a death penalty" though. It's protecting oneself from harm in the immediate situation.
No it most certainly is not the same thing, because Trayvon didn't "steal Zimmerman's purse". Trayvon hadn't stolen anything, or committed any crimes whatsoever. And your hypothetical captures the problem exactly, which is that Trayvon's race, and Zimmerman's pre-existing prejudice towards Trayvon's race made Zimmerman conclude that he had in-fact stolen something or intended to. The problem is that since Trayvon was black, racial prejudice makes "stole my purse" implied. And this:
Both examples were made to tackle Timsup2nothin's statement that because a person could have done things differently to avoid a confrontation, their right to self-defense in the immediate situation is now null and void.is just more of you doing the same thing... doing what Zimmerman did... ie skipping the factual reality that Trayvon was not commiting any crimes and assigning guilt just based on the fact that he was a black stranger. Trayvon had not "violently smased windows with stones" or "destroyed stuff" or "stolen from someone's shop"... but Zimmerman was stalking him anyway, for literally no reason except his own irrational racial prejudice.
Well, the expected outcome here I would say is to get your purse back. They may drop it when they realize you're catching up, but it might very well become a violent confrontation if they keep your purse and then initiate violence against you - "eigenverantwortliche Selbstgefährdung" at work again. The expected outcome is certainly not that you're thrown to the ground and put in a situation where you have to use lethal self-defense. It's possible, just as it's possible that you're killed without even having the chance to defend yourself, but those are not the expected outcomes."I didn't expect a violent confrontation where I would wind up killing the purse snatcher." Great. What exactly did you expect? You were thinking they would be so awed by your foot speed that they would give you the purse and ask for an autograph? No. You set out on the path of violence rather than trusting in the rule of law. Now, if you want to stand on "it was all just reflex" and convince the jury that the whole thing went down so fast that you had no opportunity to think about a more reasonable course than you are welcome to try it, but generally if you chase someone it is going to be very hard to prove you took all reasonable actions to avoid a deadly confrontation.
Yeah, but that's again about the actions you take in the immediate situation. You've had a rock thrown at you, in that situation, running into safety is an easy out, so committing an action that is meant to cause harm - because what else would that stone do? - is not self-defense. If you end up in a situation where you have to defend yourself because they're running at you, then the fact that you could have stayed silent, or could have run away before, does not invalidate the immediate danger that you can protect yourself from.You have a better chance with the person smashing your windows with stones, because you can be pretty convincing when you say "I saw them and just immediately yelled stop...didn't really think about it at all." So, reasonable, at least that far. If they then throw a stone at you, and you pick it up and throw it back, unexpectedly hitting them in the head and killing them, you are going to have a much harder case to make. If they charge you immediately and there is no reason to think you have an opportunity to get away, feel free to kill them.
Is really not that hard to understand. "Are you in the process of receiving violence, or is there somebody trying to do violence to you?" Yes? Then you're in a situation where you can defend yourself with whatever means are necessary to stop that violence from happening. Being punched in the face by somebody who's sitting on top of you is clearly within that realm. Just having somebody follow you around is not.
But in the end this does indeed seem to be a difference in ethics, and I don't really see a way to breach that gap. There are benefits of both, less hurt people in the case of not allowing any action that could lead to harm, but at the same time you're severely limiting the people's options of helping themselves. Especially given that you're not going to get any compensation for that purse of yours that has just been stolen by the guy who you could be following but are not allowed to. I am further on the ground of letting innocent people help themselves than making sure people who have just committed crimes are not hurt. Of course, as we see in the Zimmerman case it doesn't always work out like that.