January 2, 2025 Breaking News, Latest News, and Videos

What The Zimmerman Verdict Might Really Be Saying:

There’s always the overriding sense that one is only tossing a pebble into a wildly turbulent lake when you go to weigh-in on a national drama like the Zimmerman verdict. With that caveat let me see if there’s a view of this tragedy that, with the removal of race and then the disappointment in the verdict, gets us to something more useful in terms of our immediate and long-range future.

I’ll start by talking about bar fights. Many Americans have either participated in something that might have become a bar fight, or it did become a bar fight. Or they have at least witnessed or heard a spoken word account of a bar fight. Usually what happens is that some relatively unimportant moment, such as one person glancing at another and causing a third to think there’s sexual undercurrent in play, mixes with alcohol and the energy provided by the ‘audience’ of bar patrons… and a scuffle breaks out.

Now take any event of that particular sort… and give one of the participants a loaded handgun.

Let me then add this personal anecdote, which is that as recently as four days ago I was standing on a sidewalk engaged in what was supposed to be a discussion about matters artistic and creative.

In a moment, like some digitally rendered black cloud moving at high speed, I realized that the person I was arguing with had moved from petulant irritation to rage. Take that event, and give one of the participants a loaded handgun.

If we could do a rewrite that cast Trayvon Martin and George Zimmerman as just two individuals in a scuffle without even the faintest whiff of race at the heart of the argument… and then we removed the presence of a loaded handgun… we likely would have had something more like the incidents I just described; a mix-up that had no chance of ever becoming a national referendum on race.

But those were not the conditions present. These were some of the conditions present: A man – frustrated by his own inability to reshape himself as a law enforcement officer – followed an individual, arguably stalked him, with no justifiable cause except that the individual fit a disgustingly biased visual profile. The man pursuing had a loaded handgun.

I would offer that while the killing has been shaped, by media that require easy-to-carry ‘handles’ on their content, into a review of race in our nation… the killing coupled with the verdict is instead a chapter from the book we are currently writing about America’s relationship to guns.

I readily concede that you can’t just insist it was another thing other than the thing it was. But if we are to get a grip on our handgun epidemic, at some point we’re required to examine all the elements involved in shooting incidents. We’re focusing now on better tracking of individuals with medical histories of mental health issues, but I doubt even the most effective system of doing that would have snagged George Zimmerman in time.

That seems to leave us compelled to further examine exactly how the presence of a loaded gun changes any given moment of acrimonious human interaction. And I think it ultimately causes us to give-up on any argument that handguns are somehow not any different from a knife or a rock or a brick or a sharp stick. They are different. The presence of a gun in the Martin killing was not just a factor; it was the determining element.

Here in Santa Monica, we had a tragedy when an aged motor vehicle operator claimed that he accidentally could not determine the gas pedal from the brake pedal. But there are tragic events where cars are used as weapons by a driver having a fit of rage. So why aren’t cars looked at the same way we’re looking at guns in our society right now?

Because a gun has the unique ability to be deployed, lethally focused, and then utilized with nearly the same physical ease as one might pull out their cell phone and dial. And that – excuse me – convenience is what gun rights advocates are wishing on us for our future: That more Zimmerman-like killings are made possible by the freedom and right to access, buy, or otherwise obtain handguns in this country.

Readers would be right to question my repeat visits to this topic. But I would refer any questions concerning the priority of discussing access to guns in America to Trayvon Martin’s parents or anyone who has lost a child or spouse or co-worker or friend to a handgun. And I would also recommend that, for at least a moment, we take the racial angles out of the killing of Trayvon Martin killing and see what the Florida jury saw: That somehow George Zimmerman was acting within the confines of a right and even a freedom. That’s the dark portal from which my anger about the verdict pours out.

in Opinion
<>Related Posts

SM.a.r.t Column: Happy Holidays

December 22, 2024

December 22, 2024

S.M.a.r.t. (Santa Monica Architects for a Responsible Tomorrow) is wishing you a wonderful holiday season. We hope you are surrounded...

SM.a.r.t. Column: Preserving Santa Monica

December 15, 2024

December 15, 2024

Since Giving Tuesday I’m sure you have been bombarded with appeals from countless organizations, local, national, or even international that...

SM.a.r.t Column: Climbing The Vertical Learning Curve

December 8, 2024

December 8, 2024

The city is facing a financial crisis, the roots of which stretch back decades but have been made worse by...

SM.a.r.t Column: It’s Time To Inspect Balconies

November 24, 2024

November 24, 2024

About nine years ago, a fifth-floor balcony in a Berkeley apartment building collapsed, tragically killing several students gathered on it...

S.M.a.r.t Column: Your City is Broke

November 18, 2024

November 18, 2024

On December 10, the new City council will be seated fresh from their dominant win in the recent elections. There...

SM.a.r.t Column: Moving Ahead to the Future

November 10, 2024

November 10, 2024

As we write this, the election results are still trickling in. We’ll leave the deep analysis to others, but the...

Opinion: Fact Check: Why Vote Yes on Measure QS

November 1, 2024

November 1, 2024

Despite living in a famously progressive region, Santa Monicans are not immune from the same political misinformation and disinformation that...

SM.a.r.t Column: Lack of Oversight and No Accountability

October 31, 2024

October 31, 2024

S.M.a.r.t. periodically invites guest columnists to write opinion articles on topics of particular interests to our readers. Below is an...

SM.a.r.t Column: “Help! I’ve Fallen, and I …!!”, Cries Santa Monica!

October 25, 2024

October 25, 2024

Maybe fallen, but slipping for sure from being a desirable beachfront community that served all equally, the local residents who...

SM.a.r.t. Column: Vote

October 13, 2024

October 13, 2024

In a polarized country or City every vote counts. Regardless of which side of any issue or candidate you support,...

SM.a.r.t Column: Fact-Checking Election-Season Windbaggery

October 6, 2024

October 6, 2024

Claim: The state is requiring Santa Monica to build 9,000 apartments.Answer: Partially true, partially false. Santa Monica has a pretty...

SM.a.r.t. Column: Public Safety and Traffic Enforcement Can Help Save Lives and Revitalize Santa Monica’s Economy

September 29, 2024

September 29, 2024

We wholeheartedly endorse the candidates below for Santa Monica City Council. Their leading campaign platform is for increased safety in...

SM.a.r.t Column: Crime in Santa Monica: A Growing Concern and the Need for Prioritizing Public Safety

September 22, 2024

September 22, 2024

By Michael Jolly Over the past six months, Santa Monica has experienced a concerning rise in crime, sparking heated discussions...

SM.a.r.t Column: Ten New Commandments

September 15, 2024

September 15, 2024

Starting last week,  the elementary school students of Louisiana will all face mandatory postings of the biblical Ten Commandments in...

SM.a.r.t Column: Santa Monica’s Next City Council

September 8, 2024

September 8, 2024

In the next general election, this November 5th, Santa Monica residents will be asked to vote their choices among an...