DaButt
Wednesday 28th March 2012 2:03pm [Edited]
14,722 posts
An inquiry has been under way the entire time.
I think you're referring to the "stand your ground" law which doesn't necessarily apply to this case but a person is still allowed to use deadly force in any situation where he feels his life was threatened. By definition, I'd say that being sucker punched and having your head pounded on the pavement is a life-threatening situation.
And Zimmerman absolutely did not incite the violence.
An interesting tidbit from the FBI that race agitators like Jesse Jackson and Al Sharpton conveniently ignore while claiming that African-Americans are "under attack" in this country: relatively speaking, whites kill very few African-Americans.
African-Americans kill other African-Americans in large enough numbers that homicide is a leading cause of death for young males, while only a small percentage are killed by whites. Whites kill whites, African-Americans kill African-Americans and "others" kill "others."
http://www2.fbi.gov/ucr/cius2009/offences/expanded_information/data/shrtable_06.html
More innocent people hurt by race agitators like Spike Lee:
Elderly couple abandons their home after address is posted on Twitter as that of George Zimmerman
11:49 p.m. EST, March 27, 2012|Susan Jacobson, Orlando Sentinel
A school-cafeteria lunch lady and her husband have received hate mail, unwanted visits from reporters and fearful inquiries from neighbors - all because their Sanford-area address is being disseminated on Twitter as belonging to Trayvon Martin shooter George Zimmerman, her son said late Tuesday.
The woman, 70, who has a heart condition, and her husband, 72, have temporarily moved to a hotel to avoid the spotlight and possible danger, said son Chip Humble of Longwood.
The woman has another son named William George Zimmerman who lived with her in 1995 and still lives in Central Florida. He is no relation to George Zimmerman, 28, who killed 17-year-old Trayvon Feb. 26, sparking national outrage and international interest.
William Zimmerman isn't sure how his mother and stepfather's address became public. He said he used it to register a car, get a drivers license and vote when he lived there briefly after college.
"This is really scary, and I'm concerned for my family," Zimmerman told the Orlando Sentinel Tuesday night. "It's scary because there are people who aren't mentally right and will take this information and run with it."
Zimmerman traced the tweets - which he said have been retweeted by actor-director Spike Lee - to a man in California. Zimmerman has implored the man to stop and said he received this response, "Black power all day. No justice, no peace" and an obscenity.
Lee's tweet has been removed, but it continues to be retweeted.
"To endanger people who are innocent because people are angry is not the answer," William Zimmerman said. "That's not how we're going to heal. It's not to help the Martin family for someone else to be hurt."