
Trayvon Martin, a 17-year-old African-American youth, was shot in the
chest and killed at point-blank range by a vigilante on Feb. 26 in
Sanford, Fla. Martin was unarmed as he was returning from a store when
his young life was tragically cut short. The man who shot him, George
Zimmerman — who lived in a gated community — has not been arrested
as of this writing.
The 911 tapes of the exchange between the two, including the shot
that killed Martin, have been released to the public. On these tapes,
Martin can be heard pleading for his life before Zimmerman pulls the
trigger.
In 2005, Florida passed the “Stand Your Ground” law, which allows
citizens to use deadly force if they “feel” threatened with injury
or death, which Zimmerman has used to claim “self-defense.” But
other evidence has come forth disproving Zimmerman’s claim that he
shot Martin in self-defense, along with the fact that on the 911 call,
he was asked not to pursue the teenager.
The fact that the Sanford Police Department has not arrested
Zimmerman, almost a month after the shooting, has outraged millions of
people around the U.S. and the world. If Martin had been the shooter,
the odds of him being arrested immediately would have been
overwhelming. The Sanford police have already been cited for not
arresting anyone who assaults Black people. It is this known history,
along with the “Stand Your Ground” law, that gave Zimmerman the
green light to kill Martin. ABC News reported that Martin was
subjected to a racial slur by Zimmerman before he was killed.
A petition demanding Zimmerman’s arrest has garnered 600,000
signatures, as more continue to sign it. Thousands of tweets from the
U.S. and worldwide are pouring in demanding justice for Trayvon
Martin. These tweets include famous celebrities such as Don Cheadle,
Rosanne Barr, Taraji P. Henson, John Legend, Immortal Technique,
Russell Simmons and more. This social media phenomenon forced the U.S.
Justice Department to announce on March 19 that it would open an
“investigation” into the shooting. And a grand jury in Florida
will supposedly make a ruling next month on this case.
Impunity for repression
Trayvon Martin joins the already countless list of young
African-American men who have lost their lives for no other reasons
than being young, male and a person of color. And in Martin’s
particular case, he had his life stolen from him walking while Black,
wearing a hoodie and carrying a bag of Skittles, as many tweets
indicate.
Whether it’s murder by a police officer or a vigilante’s bullet,
a bloody war on African-American youth is deepening by leaps and
bounds as the capitalist economic crisis becomes more permanent and
insoluble. This war is rooted within a brutal U.S. capitalist system
built on the foundation of slavery and all forms of racist Jim Crow.
This is a system that in general gives a blank check to its repressive
apparatus — the police — to racially profile Black, Latino/a and
Native youth in disproportionate numbers without impunity.
This is a system that has systematically disenfranchised millions of
young Black men from getting decent-paying jobs, education and health
care if they suffer from drug addiction; as a consequence, their
numbers are swelling the prisons. The only work they do find is in
prison, where they are forced to work for slave wages averaging a
dollar or less an hour.
And if they are released from prison, they are demonized, denied
access to jobs and stigmatized for life for being a “former
felon.” They are also denied the right to political representation.
For instance, more than 1.4 million African-American men will be
denied the right to vote in the 2012 presidential election due to past
felony convictions. Florida is home to many of these former felons,
relegating it to a modern-day plantation.
Since 2008 and the election of Barack Obama as the first
African-American president, the big business pundits have described
the U.S. as a “post-racial” society. Nothing could be further from
the truth. If anything, there is even more racism today as many of the
progressive gains won by mass struggles, starting in the 1930s with
the building of unions through the 1960s with the upsurge of the Black
Liberation movement, have been decimated.
Protests calling for justice for Trayvon Martin are being called
around the country, including a “A Million Hoodies March for Trayvon
Martin” in New York on March 21 in Union Square, where Occupy Wall
Street activists have set up tents.
This latest atrocity in Florida offers an important reminder: Youth
in the Black, Latino/a and other oppressed communities have an
objective, common interest with many white youth involved in the OWS
movement. Capitalism does not offer them any hope for a bright,
productive future. OWS’s solidarity with youth of color who are
daily under the gun is crucial in forging class unity against all of
capitalism’s evils, especially racism.
Articles copyright 1995-2012 Workers World. Verbatim copying and
distribution of this entire article is permitted in any medium without
royalty provided this notice is preserved.























































