Dragonbums said:
Then if Zimmerman had not gone out of the car what do you think Trayvon would of done as opposed to running away like he initially did?
I don't know. Do you think Zimmerman would have gotten out of his car if Martin had not have run?
Evidence that Trayvon was being followed? Well Zimmerman already is the evidence since he stated himself that he was tracking him down before calling 911.
So? That's not illegal.
I never said I claimed that. I said someone else in the thread posted the call transcript in which the operator told Zimmerman not to follow Trayvon.
And, that's not what happened.
"We don't need you to do that" is
NOT the same thing as "Do not follow".
And he couldn't of just gone to the street corner and look up at the sign all the while still being in his car?
What street corner? Martin ran back behind the houses, off the street.
Or barring that use his smartphone?
a) You assume he had a smartphone.
b) You assume that the streets of a private gated community would be on the map.
c) You assume the smartphone has accurate maps.
Because being followed in the middle of the night by a car for a couple of blocks and hearing said person get out of the car is clearly not a reason in the slightest.
That's one possible reason. Not a reason that would get Martin off of (attempted) murder charges, had he lived.
Though, you did completely miss the point of what I said.
Why Martin attacked Zimmerman is irrelevant.
That Martin attacked Zimmerman with lethal force, pinning him down and slamming his head into the conceit is the only thing that matters, and is why this is a clear cut case of self-defense and justifiable homicide.
Yes it does because Zimmerman was the one who chose to follow Trayvon in the first place.
Because, he thought Martin looked suspicious. You seem to think this is relevant. It is not.
I wonder if you'll tell that to the next person who claims he/she was being stalked when they were being followed around for a couple of blocks for quite a while.
If you remember, the definition of Stalking requires
repeated actions.
Zimmerman had just saw Martin for the first time, and thus it could not have been stalking. If you have evidence to the contrary, then please share it with the rest of the class.
Oh, look at that. That also fits as an adjective. A description of a verb. So yeah, I think I am using the definition of stalking correctly.
You can think that all you want. It doesn't make it true.
Yes. You instigate something you are partly to blame. Just like how in school if you throw the first punch, it doesn't matter if the kid rails on you like a fucking gorilla you are still getting a consequence. It may not be as severe but you still started it.
You are wrong.
Let's take your example, Bill threw the first punch at Bob. In order to claim self-defense, Bob can only use force that's equivalent to the force used against him. However, if Bob starts slamming Bill's head into the ground, that is excessive force and the fact that Bill threw the first punch no longer matters. At the point that Bob starts slamming Bill's head into the ground, he has begun using lethal force. And, Bill would be justified in responding by using lethal force in return.
Though, to bring this back to reality. The physical evidence clearly showed that the only injuries Martin "suffered" were scrapped knuckles.
So, Zimmerman must have instigated the fight by headbutting Martin's fist.
And either way, that still isn't me denying the fight. That's just me saying that the person who started it has just as much to blame as the person who took it too far.
And, do you have
ANY proof of who started the fight? Yeah... I thought so.
Because most people are cowardly and would of run away some more. However like I said people have a "fight or flight" response.
You do understand there are options other than just running away or fighting... Right?
And there are a few people that would fight rather than flight, and Trayvon apparently was of the fighting variety.
But, good for him. He brought a fist fight to a man with a gun. I wonder if he was nominated for a Darwin award...
Well since Trayvon is dead there isn't much. At most perhaps disorderly conduct.
Except, his conduct wasn't disorderly. Martin's was, when he attacked Zimmerman.