It looks like the foundation is doing its job of supporting Martin's parents quite nicely.
Words fail me.
[align=center]
[/align]Moderator: Global Moderator

[/align]

I think that was established in court and again by his girlfriend, who casually admitted it during two separate interviews on national television.moda0306 wrote: So now we've established he was actually trying to kill George Zimmerman?
Collectibles?Pointedstick wrote: [align=center][/align]
[/align]
[/align]And how would anyone know this?? I assume the girlfriend wasn't discussing the matter with either of the two combatants during the fight.Pointedstick wrote:I think that was established in court and again by his girlfriend, who casually admitted it during two separate interviews on national television.moda0306 wrote: So now we've established he was actually trying to kill George Zimmerman?

No, but it was her urging immediately before the attack (they were talking on the phone up until the moment of the first blow) that contributed to Martin's decision to attack Zimmerman, again, by her own admission. She counseled Martin that Zimmerman might be a gay rapist who would follow him home and molest Martin's brother. I'm not making this up. She said it in court, and then she said it again on Piers Morgan's show and on the Huffington Post.WiseOne wrote: And how would anyone know this?? I assume the girlfriend wasn't discussing the matter with either of the two combatants during the fight.
Well, Zimmerman wasn't "a guy with a gun". He was just a guy. His gun was concealed, so Martin didn't know he had a gun until Zimmerman was on the ground. It's not like Zimmerman was angrily charging at Martin brandishing a pistol.WiseOne wrote: If a guy with a gun followed and then caught up with you, would you be so confident that he wasn't a threat? In that situation, I might well decide to at least try to disable the guy if I had the ability to do so. And I'd be terrified enough that I wouldn't necessarily be acting completely logically. I truly don't understand the sentiments on this board against Trayvon Martin. He was certainly no angel, but I don't see how his actions were any less justified than Zimmerman's.


"Ignoring all the evidence, there's no evidence!"moda0306 wrote: All the physical facts of the case aside leading us to believe that Zimmerman was in quite a pickle and was unable to prevent what was going on, stating conclusively or with any certainty at all that Martin was trying to kill Zimmerman is pretty excessive.
But if you did beat him up due to your fear that he might be a gay rapist, and he killed you in defense of his own life, wouldn't it be reasonable to refer to you as a homophobe who chose the wrong target?moda0306 wrote: Further, if some guy was following me through the dark, through yards, the idea that he may be a rapist is probably not the most outrageous thing in the world. If some guy was following me at night I'd be nervous. I certainly wouldn't try to beat him up for it, but I wouldn't care to be referred to as a homophobic racist who attemted to kill the man as I lay in my grave.
There's nothing wrong with being afraid. And 17 year-olds are dumb. I remember when I was a dumb 17 year-old. But somehow I managed to make it to age 18 without attacking creepy strangers.moda0306 wrote: It seems that you're twisting the outwardly creepy (though not illegal) actions of Zimmerman, and Martin's interpretations of those actions, rather than giving Martin an actual legitimate fear for his well-being, as grounds to simply dismiss Martin as a homophobic racist who was trying to kill Zimmerman... an assertion that I find more than a bit hyperbolic (even if all the other assertions as to who the aggressor was and whether the fight was clearly in Martin's favor are true), especially when Zimmerman's behavior, while legal, certainly would leave plenty of people a bit off-put.
I'm not saying that Martin was conclusively trying to kill Zimmerman, but Zimmerman told the police that Martin said he was going to kill him (i.e., "you gonna die tonight"), and a reasonable person could easily interpret having their head repeatedly slammed into a sidewalk by someone sitting on top of them who broke their nose minutes earlier as evidence of their attacker having the intent to kill them.moda0306 wrote: All the physical facts of the case aside leading us to believe that Zimmerman was in quite a pickle and was unable to prevent what was going on, stating conclusively or with any certainty at all that Martin was trying to kill Zimmerman is pretty excessive.
It was Martin's girlfriend who said he was a homophobic racist, not me.Further, if some guy was following me through the dark, through yards, the idea that he may be a rapist is probably not the most outrageous thing in the world. If some guy was following me at night I'd be nervous. I certainly wouldn't try to beat him up for it, but I wouldn't care to be referred to as a homophobic racist who attempted to kill the man as I lay in my grave.
Maybe Martin was just a guy who was trying to kill Zimmerman. I'm only citing the racist homophobic motivations because that is what the State of Florida probably would have cited in charging Martin with capital murder if he had succeeded in killing Zimmerman.It seems that you're twisting the outwardly creepy (though not illegal) actions of Zimmerman, and Martin's interpretations of those actions, rather than giving Martin an actual legitimate fear for his well-being, as grounds to simply dismiss Martin as a homophobic racist who was trying to kill Zimmerman... an assertion that I find more than a bit hyperbolic (even if all the other assertions as to who the aggressor was and whether the fight was clearly in Martin's favor are true), especially when Zimmerman's behavior, while legal, certainly would leave plenty of people a bit off-put.
Did you see the neighbor John Good's testimony? There was no question whatsoever that Martin was on top and continuing the attack "ground and pound" style. Good had a very clear view and provided a tremendous amount of detail about what he saw.Anyways... Martin is dead as a doornail, so all we're left with to defend his actions is his illiterate girlfriend or whatever she was, the man who shot him, and a few neighbors who could barely see anything.
I interpreted that comment to mean that if he was again faced with the choice of submitting to a vicious attack or defending himself, he would defend himself again.The fact that Zimmerman has proclaimed that he wouldn't change one thing about what he did had he been given the chance to do it again also speaks volumes.
If I am walking down a dark street and someone is in front of me, you could say I am following that person, and there is nothing inherently creepy about that.Simply put, following someone on a dark street is creepy.
I would wish that the guy who attacked me had handled it differently as well.It's not illegal. It doesn't warrant physical aggression. But if I were to follow someone and they were to end up dead at my hands, I probably would, at the very least, wish that I'd handled it differently.
Homophobia is a general negative attitude towards gay activity. It's not the fear you might feel by someone who's following you at night that might assault you. To make ths about homophobia is a bit ridiculous. It's the natural fear someone might feel if they're followed at night by another person.But if you did beat him up due to your fear that he might be a gay rapist, and he killed you in defense of his own life, wouldn't it be reasonable to refer to you as a homophobe who chose the wrong target?
In my post above I was willing to give Martin that first nose-breaking shot on Zimmerman. That would be the one that was in response to all of the irrational, unreasonable and illegitimate fears you are citing above.moda0306 wrote:Homophobia is a general negative attitude towards gay activity. It's not the fear you might feel by someone who's following you at night that might assault you. To make ths about homophobia is a bit ridiculous. It's the natural fear someone might feel if they're followed at night by another person.But if you did beat him up due to your fear that he might be a gay rapist, and he killed you in defense of his own life, wouldn't it be reasonable to refer to you as a homophobe who chose the wrong target?
If girl was creeped the hell out by some guy following her at night, it wouldn't be "straightophobia," it would just be fear of this guy who might rape you or assault you. These two are TOTALLY different.
Further, "imminent peril" seems quite relative to me. People react emotionally when they feel they might be in peril. There's also never a hard line, as there's ALWAYS some uncertainty as to 1) whether you're in imminent peril, or 2) whether you have a way to back out.
I'm not trying to make Martin out to be a martyr hero... just trying to play devil's advocate when I see him refered to as a homophobic racist pre-meditated murderer. And Zimmerman's a bit cold for not wanting to rethink his actions.
Simonjester wrote: even if he was afraid of Zimmerman heading on home would still have been the best possible first choice, if Zimmerman had been a perv up to no good then the punch in the nose and the fight would have taken place on his property (where he was staying) and the case for his feeling the need to punch the guy or ground and pound him unconscious would be a pretty solid one, Zimmerman would be the threatening trespasser at that point, and since Zimmerman wasn't a perv and apparently had stopped following him at the time of the altercation none of what actually transpired would have happened at all

It is different--because sexual assault at night by a man walking right behind you is a very real danger faced by women.moda0306 wrote:Homophobia is a general negative attitude towards gay activity. It's not the fear you might feel by someone who's following you at night that might assault you. To make ths about homophobia is a bit ridiculous. It's the natural fear someone might feel if they're followed at night by another person.But if you did beat him up due to your fear that he might be a gay rapist, and he killed you in defense of his own life, wouldn't it be reasonable to refer to you as a homophobe who chose the wrong target?
If girl was creeped the hell out by some guy following her at night, it wouldn't be "straightophobia," it would just be fear of this guy who might rape you or assault you. These two are TOTALLY different.
"Imminent peril" means if you don't take action RIGHT NOW, you believe you will be injured, killed, or kidnapped in the next few seconds.moda0306 wrote: Further, "imminent peril" seems quite relative to me. People react emotionally when they feel they might be in peril. There's also never a hard line, as there's ALWAYS some uncertainty as to 1) whether you're in imminent peril, or 2) whether you have a way to back out.