Douse
the Flames, Mr. President!
by
Patrick
J. Buchanan
Recently
by Patrick J. Buchanan: The
Glaring Inequality of Obamaville
Barack Obama's
statement that the death of Trayvon Martin was a tragedy that cries
out for a more thorough investigation was the right and necessary
thing to say.
But it fell
far short of what was needed: a presidential call for a halt to
the rhetoric that is stirring up racial rage and inflaming the nation.
The incendiary language being deployed is both divisive and dangerous.
Addressing
the Sanford, Fla., incident, Black Muslim Minister Louis Farrakhan
tweeted: "Where there is no justice, there will be no peace. Soon,
and very soon, the law of retaliation may ... be applied."
The New Black
Panther Party has issued a "Wanted Dead or Alive" poster featuring
the face of George Zimmerman, the man who shot Martin, and printed
up a flier saying Martin was "murdered in cold blood."
When Panther
leader Mikhail Muhammad was asked if this could ignite an explosive
situation that has already seen death threats drive Zimmerman and
his father from their homes, Muhammad cursed and said Zimmerman
"should be fearful for his life."
Demanding "an
eye for an eye and a tooth for a tooth," the Black Panther leader
offered $10,000 for Zimmerman's capture and called for 5,000 black
men to run him down.
"If the government
won't do the job, we'll do it," he warned.
Spike Lee helpfully
tweeted Zimmerman's home address.
Friends say
Zimmerman fears for his life. One man has already been arrested
for threatening to kill Bill Lee, the Sanford police chief who has
stepped down and turned the investigation over to the state, the
Justice Department, the FBI and a special prosecutor.
Returning from
Geneva, Jesse Jackson, too, headed for Sanford, saying: "Blacks
are under attack. ... Targeting, arresting, convicting blacks and
ultimately killing us is big business." On arrival, Jackson said
Trayvon Martin was a "kid shot down in cold blood by a vigilante."
Talk show host
Joe Madison charged Zimmerman with a "hate crime." The Grio, a black
news and opinion website, compares the killing of Trayvon Martin
to the 1955 murder of Emmett Till in Mississippi.
Till, 14, had
flirted with a white woman. Her husband and brother kidnapped, mutilated
and murdered the boy and dumped his body into the Tallahatchie River.
Emmett Till was lynched.
Trayvon Martin
was shot by an overzealous Neighborhood Watch volunteer who grew
suspicious of an unfamiliar black man or youth in a hoodie walking
at night in the rain in a gated community he patrolled.
What appears
to have happened is that, after alerting police to Martin's presence,
Zimmerman followed him in his SUV – against the advice of the cops.
Where the street ended, Zimmerman got out.
A fight ensued.
According to two witnesses, Zimmerman was losing, flat on his back,
screaming for help. It seems unlikely a 17-year-old football player
like Martin, angry and in a fistfight, would be screaming for help.
Police say
that when they got there, they found Martin dead and Zimmerman with
a bloody nose, a cut on the back of his head and grass stains on
the back of his shirt.
Did Zimmerman,
on his back, losing the fight, fearing this black kid was a criminal
who might beat him to death or grab his gun, fire in presumed self
defense? Did Martin, who had a right to be enraged with this character
following and hassling him, start the fight?
Would Zimmerman,
who carried a legal firearm, start a fistfight with an athletic
black youth who was reportedly 6 inches taller?
The scenario
above appears to be the one upon which Sanford police relied when
they declined to arrest Zimmerman. That Trayvon's body was taken
to the morgue and identified as "John Doe" suggests that the police,
too, concluded he was an intruder.
They were terribly
wrong, as was Zimmerman. But to call this cold-blooded murder or
an Emmett Till-type lynching appears, from the existing evidence,
to be both demagogic and inflammatory.
Yet, there
are questions that need answers.
Why, with a
dead teenager, did the Sanford police not bring in Zimmerman and
get his story on paper? Some journalists contend there are racial
slurs on the tapes of Zimmerman talking to the cops. Others hear
no such thing.
Zimmerman's
father calls the media portrayal of his son as a racist an injustice,
and says his son has a Peruvian mother, is Spanish-speaking, grew
up in a multiracial family and has many black friends.
And the clamor
of the crowd – "Arrest him!" – raises a question.
Arrest him
– for what?
If
the Sanford police believe they have no case for murder or manslaughter
or any felony, what do they charge him with, after they arrest him?
More critically,
where is President Obama?
When Rep. Gabrielle
Giffords was shot during a rampage by a crazed gunmen, Obama stepped
in with a splendid address to cool the passions and call a halt
to the false and fevered accusations of moral complicity in the
monstrous crime of a lone killer.
Where is the
Obama of Tucson now?
March
27, 2012
Patrick
J. Buchanan [send
him mail] is co-founder and editor of The
American Conservative. He is also the author of seven books,
including Where
the Right Went Wrong, and Churchill,
Hitler, and the Unnecessary War. His latest book is Suicide
of a Superpower: Will America Survive to 2025? See his
website.
Copyright
© 2012 Creators Syndicate
The
Best of Patrick J. Buchanan
|