17 year old african american boy Trayvon Martin was going into a 7 Eleven to get a snack before he flew back home. He walked out of the store and was being stalked by a strange man who turned out to be a volunteer cop. The cop had then told the station that there was suspicious juvenile. The police said not to pursue but he did anyways. He then shot Trayvon in the chest instantly killing him. This was not the only occasion that a police officer beat up an african american for no reason at all. Police
February 26 2012 Trayvon Martin was shot dead by George Zimmerman, who pleaded not guilty for using self-defense. One important issue to the self-defense plea is that Mr. Zimmerman was familiar with the “stand your ground law” that allows a person to use deadly force in order to prevent heavy injuries, In which Zimmerman states that Trayvon was bashing his head on the concrete. With regards to this the jurors agreed that it was a self-defense situation because they were told that Trayvon was on top and
Racial Profiling As I walk to the store to pick up snacks for the next half of the super bowl, I am trying to make it quick. I finally arrive at the store and quickly get my two favorite items, skittles and an ice tea. Thinking to myself that this is all I need, not knowing that it would be my last meal. On the walk back home, I have a feeling that I am being followed. I speed up. I turn around to find that a grown Hispanic man, mid-age, and heavily built is in fact, following me. In my head,
Brown and Eric Garnder but it became 'debatable; but some cities (not states) did follow through and only implemented them on some of their officers. Ok. I haven't followed the Trayvon Martin case but I just read it because you mentioned it and it is absolutly horrific. IF I mean IF Zimmerman did shoot Trayvon Martin out of self defense, I beleive he should have been charged with voluntary manslaughter for imperfect self-defense. But according to Australian law he would have still been
Samantha Ekanem Mrs. Nelson PreAP English 2 24 August 2015 To Kill A Mocking Bird & From Trayvon Martin to ‘Black Lives Matter’ People have different opinions and views on subjects and we won’t always agree with them or understand why they think that way. “You never really understand a person until you consider things from his point of view... Until you climb inside of his skin and walk around in it.” I like that Atticus is teaching his kids valuable lessons. We don’t know what makes someone
In July 2013, George Zimmerman, a self-proclaimed Florida neighborhood watchman and self-proclaimed vigilante, was acquitted in the death of Trayvon Martin, a 17 year old black teenager. This was the initial impetus for the Black Lives Matter movement, which first appeared as a hashtag after Zimmerman’s acquittal. The movement, which has its roots in social media, has since grown to hold a much larger place in our national conscience. The movement’s place was solidified with its vocal responses subsequent
in American society is the treatment of African-Americans, and how they have become increasingly criminalized and targeted. The Black Lives Matter Movement sprung from the increasing mistreatment of black people by police, i.e. the homicides of Trayvon Martin, Eric Garner, and Michael Brown. Black activists have created the movement and offered their own perspectives of what the movement means to them and the implications it has on American society. Between the World and Me is Ta-Nehisi Coates’ book
great bodily harm to another…” With this law the “fear of death” only has to be imagined in order for use of deadly force to be used. The Huffington Post continued to investigate the murder alongside the American judicial system. In an article “Trayvon Martin Shooting: Voice Experts Claim Cries Heard On 911 Call Were Not George Zimmerman’s,” A local newspaper, “The Orlando Sentinel consulted two voice experts to try to settle the debate, and both came to the same conclusion: The cries could not have
Single Stories are Problematic In the world we live in now it has become easy to stereotype and create a single story about certain people and situations, whether it’s intentional or not. In 2009, a Nigerian novelist named Chimamanda Adichie gave an amazing TED talk called “The Danger of the Single Story”. A single story more or less means an incomplete or inaccurate viewpoint of a person or culture based on a story created from a single experience. When one hears the same story over and over
“What you get by achieving your goals is not as important as what you become by achieving your goals.” –Henry David Thoreau. This quote demonstrates everything I wish to achieve while attending the University of Tennessee at Martin. Through this school and the amazing music program, I plan to become an even better leader, teacher, student, and trombone player. Having my work ethic, planning, and determination I have made it this far and I do not plan to slow down any time soon. Due to my accomplishments