44.7 F
Seattle
Tuesday, April 7, 2026

Looking Beyond George Zimmerman

Julianne Malveaux
Julianne Malveaux

Trayvon Martin might not be dead except for the fact that George Zimmerman  carried a gun and acted as a wanna-be policeman.  Rev. Al Sharpton and  others deserve props for rallying people and insisting that Zimmerman be brought  to trial.  Anytime a gun goes off, I think somebody has to go to trial,  simply to ensure that their actions be accounted for.  Zimmerman was found  not guilty, but least he has been made somewhat accountable for his actions.

Zimmerman isn’t the only one slaughtering young Black men, though. Too many  of our young brothers are slaughtering each other. In Washington, D.C., rising  senior Omar Adam Sykes was killed on Independence Day.  He was a victim of  an attempted robbery, when two men approached he and a friend with guns.   The Howard University police say that robberies on campus are on the decline,  but I don’t think that Omar Sykes’ parents find that any consolation.   Indeed, one young Black man lost to gun violence is too many, whether the  perpetrator was a vigilante like George Zimmerman, or another young Black man  who is so desperate for dollars that he will kill another brother.

Seventy-four people were shot, and a dozen killed in gun violence in Chicago  during the July 4 weekend.  Two of them were young boys, aged 5 and  7.  Much of this is gang violence, and too many of the victims were in the  wrong place at the wrong time.  No matter.  This scourge of gun  violence is a plague on our nation, but especially on the African-American  community.

The online website Slate estimates that more than 6,500 people have been  killed this year through gun violence.  The Centers for Disease Control  says it is at least twice as many.  Since the massacre of 20 children and  six adults in Newtown, Conn., there has been a marked concern about gun  violence.  Concern, however, does not move legislation.  Those  politicians who have been purchased by the National Rifle Association lament gun  violence but are unwilling to do anything about it.  So the violence  continues.

- Advertisement -

There are heart-breaking stories of those who are massacred.  Young men  and women at the cusp of adulthood who happened to be “hanging out” with friends  on the wrong corner.  Fathers who agitated an enraged driver.   Children who “got in the way” of a random bullet.  The NRA says that guns  don’t kill, people do.  But people without guns can perhaps wreak havoc  without creating a fatality.

While the population of the United States exceeds 300 million, there are  about 280 million guns in civilian hands.  Every year, 4.5 million  firearms, including about 2 million guns have been sold.  While many do not  own guns, those who do keep acquiring them – the average gun owner had nearly  seven guns in 2004, up from four guns 10 years earlier.  More than 30  people are victims of gun violence each day.  A third of them are under 20;  half are between 18 and 35.  Gun violence is the leading cause of death of  African Americans in that age group.

What if George Zimmerman had not had a gun? If he did what he was told to do,  police officers may have come and questioned Trayvon as he proceeded to the  house of his daddy’s friend.  Or perhaps there may have been a fist  fight.  There surely would not have been a deadly bullet, and while  Zimmerman was the slayer, our gun laws are complicit in Trayvon Martin’s  execution.

How many young people have been victims of unintended violence, victims of  drive by violence, people just minding their business and losing their lives for  minding their business?  How many people with axes to grind would whoop and  holler instead of carrying guns to workplaces, schools, and other places?   How many crazy legislatures are relaxing gun laws to allow people to carry guns  in bars and near schools?  How many retailers, such as Starbucks, refuse to  ban guns in their establishments (in states where openly carrying guns is  legal)?

- Advertisement -

As we mourn for Trayvon Martin, let us also recognize the scourge of gun  violence.  If we restricted gun ownership, this tragedy, and thousands of  others, may not have happened.

Must Read

Trump Sets Deadline On Iran Strait Standoff

President Trump has set a deadline for Iran to reopen the Strait of Hormuz, threatening to bomb key Iranian infrastructure if they do not comply, while also expected to hold a press conference about the rescue of a U.S. airman shot down over Iran.