Trayvon Martin, George Zimmerman & The Decline of Racism & Violence in America
Trayvon Martin will not go gently into that good night, and the
poor kid's ghost can and will haunt us, it seems, until justice is
done.
His shooter, the neighborhood watch captain George Zimmerman, has
been arrested and charged with second-degree murder, so the wheels
of the legal system, however slowly and imperfectly, are grinding
forward.
But we can't shake the death of 17-year-old Trayvon. That's partly
because it was senseless and avoidable. And also in part because
his shooting is being ridden like Seabiscuit by everyone to benefit
their respective political sides and agendas.
Figures such as Jesse Jackson and
Al Sharpton want to use the Martin shooting to say that when it
comes to race, little to nothing has changed in America over the
past 20, 30, or 50 years. Gun control advocates want to say that
the shooting proves that America is awash in the blood of gun
violence egged on by Second Amendment fundamentalists.
But neither of those things is true.
While there's still a lot of work to be done, race relations are
getting better, as is clear from the majority of black, white,
Latino, and other respondents in
poll after
poll. Electing Barack Obama as president doesn't give us a free
pass on the nation's ugly history, but it's a pretty good indicator
that things aren't the way they used to be.
And gun violence in every way is way down from where it was
just a few decades ago, when most states and localities started to
allow more people to own and carry guns. That's true even in
Florida, which liberalized its gun laws years ago, leading people
to worry it would become "the Gunshine State." In fact, Florida's
death rate from guns is
average for the country.
I'm saddened by Trayvon Martin's death. I don't think that George
Zimmerman should have pursued him and confronted him after calling
the cops.
But I also think that we can only negatively compound the tragedy
if we insist on making it embody trends that are actually moving in
positive directions.
About 2 minutes.
Produced by Joshua Swain. Camera by Jim Epstein. Written by Nick Gillespie and Kennedy, who also hosts.
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