I may get in trouble for saying it, but I don’t hear anyone
else saying it, and someone has to say it:
The whole thing about the Zimmerman verdict is that many black men have
been executed in America on much less evidence than the people of Florida had against
George Zimmerman. Not only that, but
many black men and women have been lynched without benefit of trial for petty
crimes or no crimes. If President Obama
cannot address this issue, he should be quiet about the Zimmerman verdict and
Florida law. The prosecution had a weak
case against Mr. Zimmerman, but many people consider that a lame excuse for his
acquittal.
It is unreasonable to expect any president to repair a
criminal justice system that is rigged against black males. After all, it took Dwight D. Eisenhower – the
man who had commanded the largest army in history and who had won the most
decisive battle in history – to send federal troops to a high school in Little
Rock so that some kids could attend classes without being burned alive. It took Lyndon B. Johnson – a lifelong
political wheeler-dealer – to push the Voting Rights Act through Congress.
When President Eisenhower sent the troops to Central High
School he was enforcing a court ruling.
President Johnson needed a law to enforce to ensure that all citizens
had equal access to the voting booth. It
is unreasonable to expect a president to solve our racial problems because that
is the role of Congress and of the courts.
It is also the responsibility of us as individual citizens. The president’s job is to enforce the
decisions of Congress and the courts.
If we do not like the decisions our government makes, we
need to vote for or against people who run for offices other than President of
the United States. Many of our citizens
do not understand the Three Branches of Government and the system of Checks and
Balances between them. They think of our
president as The Big Boss who has to stand for election every four years. This ignorance contributes to a too-powerful
presidency. The way I learned it in my
high school civics class is that Congress makes the laws, the courts interpret
the laws, and the president enforces the laws.
I can understand why President Obama felt compelled to
speak. He is a legal scholar and
probably felt pressured to display some leadership. But, George Zimmerman is now a free man and a
private citizen. Unless the president can announce a plan to address imbalances in the criminal justice system, it is inappropriate for him to voice his personal opinion on a specific case. He cannot introduce a bill in the Florida
legislature to change the Stand Your Ground statute there, so he should not say
anything about that, either. It is up to
the voters and legislators in Florida to decide if they want to change that
statute. President Obama’s legal
opinions can wait until he leaves office.
I cannot see how it can be useful for any president to comment on legal
issues of which he can do nothing about.
It may lead to unrealistic expectations about what he can do to solve problems
such as racial profiling.
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