Real Clear Politics / Real Clear Markets
 
July 20, 2013  
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By _Peter  Schiff_ (http://www.realclearmarkets.com/authors/peter_schiff/) 


The Trayvon Martin/George Zimmerman tragedy has become one of those  
transcendent events that dominates the national discourse and throws light on  
dimly lit aspects of our society. Obviously, the case touches most closely on  
issues of race relations, media culture, and the politicization of the 
justice  system. It also reveals how preconceived emotional commitments to a 
narrative  can consistently trump demonstrable facts. These tendencies are also 
present in  the polarized discussion about the persistent weakness of the 
U.S. economy. In  both cases, the majority of observers have chosen to believe 
an emotionally  comfortable narrative while ignoring a far more likely, 
ambiguous, and  unsatisfying reality. 
When the Trayvon Martin case first caught national attention, it confirmed  
the worst fears that many had about America. A sweet young African-American 
 teenager (12 or 13 by the looks of the pictures we were presented) 
returning  home from a convenience store with Skittles and ice tea is gunned 
down 
in cold  blood by a racist white man who profiled him as a criminal simply 
because he was  a black kid in a hooded sweatshirt. The fact that the killer 
had not been  arrested by local authorities, simply reinforced the suspicions 
that the South  (which apparently includes central Florida) remains locked 
in a Jim Crow era of  institutionalized white supremacy. The gears of the 
media and the political  establishment quickly fell in line to support this 
narrative. This resulted in  the appointment of a special prosecutor and a 
murder trial for George  Zimmerman.
 
But then demonstrable facts started coming in that clashed significantly 
with  this narrative. But the unwanted information was thoroughly ignored. The 
media  and the public had become so invested in the story that no contrary 
facts could  be tolerated. Rather than reconsidering initial assumptions, 
everyone just dug  in their heels and stood firm. 
As it turns out Trayvon himself was not the little boy that the pictures  
suggested. The most recent images of him as a 17-year old revealed a much 
more  mature, masculine, and imposing figure. His behavior at home and in 
school  objectively suggests a youth veering towards violence. He had gotten 
into 
 trouble for fighting, had been suspended from school three times, once 
after  having been caught with drugs and women's jewelry that may well have 
been  stolen. His tweets and e-mails are replete with boasts of violence, drug 
use,  and even suggestions of firearm procurement. In fact, the reason he 
was living  in the housing community in which he was killed was that his 
mother sent him 200  miles north to live with his father after determining that 
she could no longer  control her troubled son. (None of these facts were 
presented to the jury.) 
For his part, George Zimmerman did not fit the mold that had been prepared  
for him either. First off, he wasn't really white, but half Hispanic 
(English  being his second language). And while he certainly had a few marital, 
personal  and psychological skeletons in his closet, nothing in his background 
suggested  that he had ever displayed racist tendencies towards blacks. In 
fact, he had  many black friends, had once championed the cause of a black 
homeless person  beaten by the son of a white policeman, mentored black 
children, and had even  taken a black woman to his high school prom. In 
addition, 
he had no affiliation  with any fringe groups with known racist tendencies. 
In fact he was a registered  and politically active democrat -- one of the 
"good guys" when it comes to  racial equality and social justice. 
The details of the encounter also failed to correspond to the narrative. 
The  only thing that is known definitively is that Zimmerman referred to 
Martin as a  "punk" expressed frustration that "they always get away" and that 
a 
911  dispatcher suggested that he need not follow Martin. Despite these 
facts there  is no solid evidence that Zimmerman actually sought a 
confrontation. 
While some of Zimmerman's actions may have shown poor judgment, such 
behavior  is not criminal, or even actionable. The evidence that does exist, 
the 
broken  nose and other injuries sustained by Zimmerman and the small abrasion 
on  Martin's hand, suggests that Martin was the aggressor in the physical 
encounter  and that Zimmerman had cause to fear continued bodily harm when he 
decided to  use deadly force. This physical evidence corresponds to the 
consistent story  told by Zimmerman and is corroborated by the only other 
eyewitness testimony.  Certainly this provides sufficient evidence to suggest 
that Zimmerman was acting  in self- defense according to the legal definition 
of the term. One need have no  sympathy for Zimmerman to conclude that the 
facts, as they exist, could not  support a conviction on the charges he faced. 
After what any objective observer would determine to be a fair and 
exhaustive  trial (if not one overly skewed to the prosecution), a jury 
returned a 
verdict  of "not guilty," even to the lesser included manslaughter charge 
that had been  thrown in at the last minute. 
But this outcome has not succeeded in changing the dominant and 
predetermined  narrative one bit. As far as the media is concerned, as well as 
those on 
the  left side of the political spectrum, George Zimmerman has gotten away 
with the  cold-blooded murder of an innocent child whose only crime was 
being black and  wearing a hoodie. None of the facts presented in or out of 
trial have mattered  in the slightest. 
Those whose interests support a continuation of this controversy, allege 
bias  in the system, even while failing to point to any overt errors in the  
proceedings. In the end, they conclude that the prosecution was simply  
incompetent and that the injustice must be in the minds of the racist, all  
female jury. As a result, they are seeking new Federal and civil venues to 
raise  
the same questions, which they will continue to ask until they get the 
answer  they expect. 
Much of the same closed-mindedness is on display in our discussion about 
the  economy. The vast majority of observers continue to subscribe to the 
dominant  narrative that our economy is improving, the Fed's Quantitative 
Easing 
programs  are responsible, and that the debt we are currently accumulating 
is not a  long-term problem. The current administration, the media, Wall 
Street, and the  Fed itself, are particularly committed to this narrative. 
After all, we have  been pursuing these policies for more than five years, and 
many of these parties  have a particular emotional and pecuniary investment 
in a positive outcome. It  would be difficult for them now to admit that 
their preferred cures have not  only been ineffective, but harmful. As a 
result, 
they will continue to advocate  for the current policies until they get the 
answers they expect. 
Not only do their underlying assumptions defy economic law and objective  
rationality, but they are also at odds with the evidence that continues to  
arrive. The data makes it clear that while asset prices (stocks, bonds, and 
real  estate), are currently being inflated by an activist monetary policy, 
the real  economy continues to stagnate. What supports do exist are based 
solely on  government intervention. Yet they nevertheless discuss a potential 
Fed exit  strategy as if the economy were in a position to make such a 
transition without  bringing on an even more severe recession than the last. In 
this light, the  failure of QEI to produce a real recovery led directly to 
QEII, and so on to QE  Infinity. We are unwilling to challenge our initial 
assumptions about what is  really wrong with our economy and how to fix it. 
To get a sense of justice and emotional clarity over the death of Trayvon  
Martin, many cling to the image of a saintly youth and ignore the more 
difficult  reality of a troubled teen picking a fight with an inept 
neighborhood 
watchman.  Accepting this reality does not lead to a conclusion that Trayvon 
deserved to  die, but it denies the self-justifying conclusions that keep 
race relations  dysfunctional. It also allows us to ignore more troubling and 
far more common  tragedies like the one that befell 18 year old Jett 
Higham, another African  American youth who lost his life in a nighttime run to 
a 
local convenience  store. The media decided that this tragedy was a 
non-story, as his killers were  also African Americans teens. 
Similarly, we prefer to believe that the dynamic, entrepreneurial, 4% to 5% 
 GDP growth economy that existed in the past is poised to return after a 
few more  months of QE. To reach this conclusion one must ignore the ugly 
reality of what  we have become. The staggering growth in government debt, the 
persistence of  high unemployment, the stifling effects of new rounds of 
anti-business  regulations, the existence of dangerous asset bubbles, and our 
dependence on  zero percent interest rates and continuous Federal Reserve 
purchases of treasury  and mortgage debt qualify our current economy as a 
walking zombie. 
We will never arrive at greater civic harmony until we are prepared to drop 
 the addictive illusions supplied by the race baiters. Similarly, we will 
never  abandon the current economic failures if we don't have the courage to 
look the  brutal reality squarely in the face.

-- 
-- 
Centroids: The Center of the Radical Centrist Community 
<[email protected]>
Google Group: http://groups.google.com/group/RadicalCentrism
Radical Centrism website and blog: http://RadicalCentrism.org

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