Cal Thomas: What’s different about Trayvon Martin case? Media partly to blame
by Cal Thomas
Columnist
March 27, 2012 12:00 AM | 1202 views | 8 8 comments | 5 5 recommendations | email to a friend | print
Cal Thomas
Cal Thomas
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If you watch the news in any large city you are probably desensitized to stories about crime involving young black men.

Most nights there are reports about several of them getting shot; often, more than one dies. It might be a gang fight, a revenge killing, robbery or a drive-by. Someone is likely killed for their cellphone, or simply because they talked to the wrong girl at a party. Tragedy has become routine. Too many young black men die on our streets; too many rot in our prisons. Two weeks ago, the Chicago Tribune reported that at least 10 people, including a 6-year-old girl, were killed in weekend shootings in Chicago.

The media love these stories because they up the ratings and spike newsstand sales. Fear sells. “If it bleeds, it leads” is a familiar saying among those in the news business. Politicians use these horrific stories as an opportunity to pontificate for the cameras. They all deplore the violence, denounce it and demand its end, their outrage well timed to make the 10 o’clock news.

The Rev. Al Sharpton frequently inserts himself into these situations, crying for “justice,” which in the case of 17-year-old Trayvon Martin is likely to come without his help, given the multiple levels of government involvement in the investigation.

The facts in this case are not yet fully known, but that doesn’t stop people from thinking they have them, giving some an excuse to resurrect racial templates from the past.

The Washington Post featured this headline last week, “Florida Shooting Stirs Memories of Civil Rights Era.”

Trayvon Martin was shot and killed by George Zimmerman, a member of a neighborhood watch group.

Whether Zimmerman was an official member, or a cop wannabe, is one of the questions investigators are asking. Zimmerman has yet to be charged, presumably, because officials are trying to sort out whether a Florida law known as “stand your ground,” which gives Florida residents the right to protect themselves with deadly force, applies in the Martin case. That hasn’t stopped nearly 1 million signers of an online “petition” from reaching conclusions before investigators and a grand jury have completed their work.

I will leave the questions about this tragedy to those looking into it, but the politics of it is worthy of comment.

In light of the number of young black men who are too often gunned down on America’s streets, what’s different about the Trayvon Martin case? Is it the fact that he was killed in a gated community and not in an alley in Detroit? If Zimmerman, a white Hispanic, were black, would we have the current controversy? If Martin were white, or any other race, would the president of the United States have called for “soul searching”? He made no comment about the Chicago shootings.

Would Al Sharpton have made the trip to Florida if Martin had been white? Not likely. Sharpton apparently hopes people have forgotten the 1987 Tawana Brawley incident during which he waved the “racism” flag in support of the African-American teenager’s contention that she had been raped by six white men. A grand jury later found that Brawley had not been the victim of a forced sexual assault. The New York prosecutor whom Brawley had accused as one of her alleged assailants successfully sued Brawley and her three advisers, including Sharpton, for defamation.

The media bear some responsibility for exacerbating racial tensions. By too often featuring stories of violent young black men they appear to promote the very racial stereotyping they deplore. Why don’t we see more stories about young black men making right choices, staying in school, rejecting drugs and getting married before having children? They exist. Can’t the media find them?

The steady drumbeat of crime and violence in the media and their association of race and crime with certain parts of town feed into the often irrational fears of white people. I’m not suggesting these stories shouldn’t be covered. I am suggesting that local news ought to tell more stories of young black men who make good decisions that benefit themselves and their communities. Or have we forgotten what “good” looks like?

Trayvon Martin should not have been killed, but Zimmerman shouldn’t be the only one facing indictment.

Cal Thomas is the country’s most widely syndicated columnist.
Comments
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CobbCountyRedneck
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March 27, 2012
Don't believe Cal Thomas or Al Sharpton or Sean Hannity or Jesse Jackson or the media or anyone else who is trying to pimp this situation to generate readership or viewership or racial unrest.

Wait until all the facts are in and accurately documented and confirmed before making up your mind about this tragedy.

anonymous
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March 31, 2012
The problem is that if the media had not focused its attention on this case nothing would have been done and the whole thing would have been swept under the rug. It will be difficult accurately document and collect the facts because the Sanford Police Dept didn't bother to find them. They served as the judge and jury and Travon Martin was determined to be just another black kid, who even if he didn't commit a crime, probably would some day.
otter357
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March 27, 2012
Cal Thomas needs a copy editor. Note this sentence:

"The Rev. Al Sharpton frequently inserts himself into these situations, crying for “justice,” which in the case of 17-year-old Trayvon Martin is likely to come without his help, given the multiple levels of government involvement in the investigation."

On first reading I thought the word "his" as in "is likely to come with without his help" referred to Trayvon Martin. Since he's prematurely dead by misadventure, i thought this very cruel.

But a second look convinced me that "his" was meant to refer to Al Sharpton. It is just that the sentence is a grammatical mistake. Cal is not that interesting anyway, sorry. I'm still surprised he is the most widely syndicated columnist in the nation. he's not interesting! And his editor needs to read more closely.
frogbreath
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March 27, 2012
Sorry Otter, But Cal Thomas is far more interesting than you.

PS I think most folks knew what Cal meant. Perhaps you had a drop of liberal prejudice in your eye.

Good Grief You chalked up chaulked in your haste to support Otter. I guess you have not been reading about crime around the country. But, hey, Zimmerman is white so let's continue the race warfare along with the gender and economic class warfare. You are a staunch Alinskyite.

I am thinking that Otter, and Good Grief are pseudonyms of another poster here.
good grief
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March 27, 2012
Give it a rest Cal, dragging out Brawley and complaining of not enough positive stories of young blacks. There are positive stories of young blacks unfortunately nobody cares. Of course the media is to blame! If it were not for the media and Sharpton this incident would have been swepted under the rug and chaulked up to another black kid trying to steal skittles and tea.
Kevin Foley
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March 27, 2012
As usual, Thomas displays his hypocrisy. He was one of the most ardent Iraq WMD media fear mongers in 2003.

This case isn't about "media." It's about a black kid in a hoodie getting gunned down by a vigilante and police indifference and/or bias.

The Sanford police simply took Zimmerman at his word and walked away. No investigation, no interviews of witnesses, no arrest. They now cite the "Stand Your Ground" law, which Florida legal experts say doesn't apply.

In Thomas' conservative world, when not blaming the victim, it's always the "media's fault."
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