Commentary
 
 
_Deconstructing Reality and Zimmerman_ 
(http://www.commentarymagazine.com/2013/07/16/deconstructing-reality-and-zimmerman/)
 
 
_Peter Wehner_ (http://www.commentarymagazine.com/author/peter-wehner/)  | 
_@Peter_Wehner_ (http://twitter.com/Peter_Wehner)  07.16.2013


 
On Monday, Attorney General Eric Holder, in addressing the verdict in the  
George Zimmerman trial, reiterated that the Department of Justice is 
considering  filing federal civil rights charges against Zimmerman in the 
aftermath 
of his  acquittal. Mr. Holder went on to _say_ 
(http://www.upi.com/Top_News/US/2013/07/15/Zimmerman-case-Justice-Dept-weighs-rights-charges/UPI-78431373
873400/) , “I want to assure you that the  Department will continue to act 
in a manner that is consistent with the facts  and the law. We are committed 
to standing with the people of Sanford, with the  individuals and families 
affected by this incident, and with our state and local  partners in order 
to alleviate tensions, address community concerns, and promote  healing. We 
are determined to meet division and confusion with understanding and  
compassion – and also with truth… We will never stop working to ensure that – 
in  
every case, in every circumstance, and in every community – justice must be  
done.” 
What an ironic formulation for Mr. Holder to use. Set aside the fact that  
Attorney General Holder, who considers America to be a _“nation of cowards”
_ (http://www.cnn.com/2009/POLITICS/02/19/holder.folo/)  on race, has done  
more than his fair share to divide us along racial lines. Set aside, too, 
the  fact that Mr. Holder’s relationship to the truth is often tenuous, 
including  when he’s testifying before Congress on matters ranging from the 
_Fast 
and Furious gun-running program_ 
(http://www.nytimes.com/2011/10/05/us/politics/gop-accuses-holder-of-misleading-congress.html?_r=0)
  to  the Department 
of Justice’s _investigation of Fox’s James Rosen_ 
(http://www.reuters.com/article/2013/05/29/us-usa-justice-holder-idUSBRE94S12I20130529)
 . 
What I had in mind is that in this case the facts, the truth, and the law 
all  point in the same direction: George Zimmerman was not guilty of 
second-degree  murder or manslaughter–and racism was not a factor in the death 
of 
Trayvon  Martin. The prosecution team said as much. (Angela Corey, the special 
prosecutor  in the case, _conceded_ 
(http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-us-canada-23304348) , “This case has never 
been about  race.”) So did the jury. 
(One of the jurors in Zimmerman’s state trial _told CNN_ 
(http://www.chicagotribune.com/news/chi-george-zimmerman-trial-20130716,0,4914143.story)
  on 
Monday that she did not  think Zimmerman racially profiled Martin. “All of us 
thought race did not play a  role,” said the juror.) And so did Chris Serino, 
the Sanford Police Department  detective who headed the shooting probe. He 
_said_ 
(http://www.thesmokinggun.com/documents/investigation/cop-told-fbi-zimmerman-not-a-racist-765093)
  the fatal shooting was not based  on Martin’s 
skin color, nor was Zimmerman considered to be a racist. That  doesn’t mean 
what Zimmerman did wasn’t misguided or a tragic error (see William  Saleton’
s piece _here_ 
(http://www.slate.com/articles/news_and_politics/frame_game/2013/07/trayvon_martin_verdict_racism_hate_crimes_prosecution_and_other_overr
eactions.html?utm_source=tw&utm_medium=sm&utm_campaign=button_toolbar) ). Bu
t it does mean that (a) he wasn’t  guilty of a crime according to Florida 
law and (b) the Department of Justice  needs to give up meddling in this case 
since there was not a shred of evidence  presented in the trial showing 
Zimmerman is racist or that his shooting of  Martin was driven by racial 
bigotry. 
But that hardly seems to matter to some of those  on the left and in the 
media, who are determined to turn this case into an  example of a hate crime. 
Consider NBC News, which _doctored recordings_ 
(http://www.washingtonpost.com/blogs/erik-wemple/wp/2013/07/14/zimmerman-lawyer-to-move-asap-against-nbc-n
ews/)  by Zimmerman in  order to make him appear to be a racist. Here’s how 
NBC’s March 27, 2012  Today show’s abridged version of Zimmerman’s 
comments (made the evening  of February 26, 2012) went: “This guy looks like 
he’s 
up to no good. He looks  black.” And here’s how the real conversation went: 
Zimmerman: This guy looks like he’s up to no good. Or he’s on drugs or  
something. It’s raining and he’s just walking around, looking about.  

Dispatcher: OK, and this guy — is he black, white or  Hispanic? 

Zimmerman: He looks black. 
So what’s going on here? Part of the answer is that liberals long to use a  
case like this to transport them to an Atticus Finch-Tom Robinson, Edmund 
Pettus  Bridge moment. They want things like the Zimmerman trial to be at 
core about a  great civil rights struggle, even if it’s actually not. Which 
leads to my second  observation. 
What we’re seeing from the left is post-modernism on full display. The 
facts,  the truth and objective reality are subordinate to the progressive 
narrative. In  this particular instance many liberals so want the killing of 
Trayvon Martin to  be driven by bigotry–which would serve as both an indictment 
of racial attitudes  in America and turn a horrible mistake into a _“
modern-day lynching”_ 
(http://www.wnd.com/2013/07/naacp-calls-verdict-modern-day-lynching/?cat_orig=politics)
 –that they will make  it so, even if it requires 
twisting the truth into something unrecognizable.  What matters, after all, 
is The Cause. And everything, including basic facts,  must be bent to fit 
it. This kind of systematic deconstruction of truth is  fairly common in 
college liberal arts courses all across America. But when it  becomes the 
primary 
mode of interpretation in a murder trial, it is something  else again. 
Most of us, when we hear the words “justice must be done,” believe that 
what  is right, reasonable, fair and in accordance with the facts be done. But 
some on  the left have something else in mind. For them, justice is a tool 
in a larger  political struggle, a means to an end. Justice can be at odds 
with reality if  reality is at odds with liberalism. Which is why the efforts 
to turn the  Zimmerman verdict into a racial miscarriage of justice is so 
discouraging and so  damaging.

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