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What Kind of Community Do We Want to Live In?

What Kind Of Community Do We Want To Live In? &Raquo; 5Ac4293C 211E 498A B256 24A697Db4Da5 1536X1024 1024X682 2by Mark M. Bello

During closing arguments in the recent Texas murder trial of Karmelo Anthony, the prosecutor asked jurors a question:

“What kind of community do you want to live in?

A simple but profound question, no? And a question worth asking beyond the walls of that courtroom.

Anthony, a black teenager, was convicted of murder for fatally stabbing Austin Metcalf, a white teenager, during a confrontation at a high school track meet. Anthony claimed self-defense. The jury rejected that claim.

Many years earlier, George Zimmerman claimed self-defense after fatally shooting Trayvon Martin, an unarmed Black teenager. Zimmerman was acquitted.

Two dead teenagers.

Two defendants claiming fear.

Two juries.

Two very different outcomes.

Why?

Before anyone accuses me of taking sides, let me be clear: I am not.

I am not arguing that Karmelo Anthony should have been acquitted. A young man is dead. The jury heard the evidence and found Anthony guilty beyond a reasonable doubt.

Nor am I relitigating the Zimmerman case. That jury reached its own conclusion under Florida law.

What interests me is something larger.

In both cases, the defendant blamed the victim.

Zimmerman claimed Trayvon Martin attacked him.

Anthony claimed Austin Metcalf threatened him.

In both cases, a teenager lost his life, and a defendant argued that he had no choice.

One jury accepted that explanation.

One jury did not.

Were the facts different enough to justify the different outcomes?

Perhaps.

Most lawyers would tell you that the factual distinctions matter. Zimmerman was the only surviving participant in a largely unwitnessed confrontation. The Anthony case reportedly involved numerous witnesses. Different facts often produce different verdicts.

But if that is the entire explanation, why did race become such a dominant part of the public conversation in both cases?

Because Americans have long struggled to answer a difficult question:

Do we perceive danger differently depending on who is standing in front of us?

The question is uncomfortable because it challenges assumptions held by people across the political spectrum.

Many Americans believe Black defendants are charged more aggressively, convicted more often, and punished more severely than similarly situated white defendants.

Others believe high-profile cases involving race often generate public pressure that distorts objective analysis of the facts.

Both concerns deserve to be taken seriously.

The truth is that confidence in our justice system depends on more than legal correctness. It depends on public trust. People must believe that race neither protects nor condemns a defendant.

That principle applies whether the defendant is black, white, rich, poor, famous, or anonymous.

Which brings me back to the prosecutor’s question.

What kind of community do we want to live in?

My answer is simple.

A community where every victim matters.

A community where every defendant receives a fair trial.

A community where self-defense claims succeed or fail based on evidence rather than politics.

A community where race neither excuses criminal conduct nor magnifies punishment.

A community where justice is blind—not because we pretend race doesn’t exist, but because we work tirelessly to ensure it does not determine outcomes.

Did race affect either of these verdicts?

I don’t know.

Neither do you.

Neither does anyone who wasn’t sitting inside the jury room.

But the question remains worth asking.

George Zimmerman was acquitted.

Karmelo Anthony was convicted.

Both defendants blamed the victims.

Both victims are dead.

What do you think explains the difference?

What kind of community do you want to live in?

Editor’s Note: This exclusive reporting was first published June 11 in Mark Bello’s And Justice for All Substack, and is reprinted here with permission. 

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Mark M. Bello

Mark M. Bello is an attorney and award-winning author of the Zachary Blake Legal Thriller Series, ripped-from-the-headlines, realistic fiction that speaks truth to power and champions the rights of citizens in our justice system. These novels are dedicated to the social justice movement. They educate, spark discussion, and inspire readers to action. One of these was “Betrayal of Justice, a blistering novel about presidential misconduct and hypocrisy” For more information, please visit www.markmbello.com.

The post What Kind of Community Do We Want to Live In? appeared first on Lean to the Left.

Bob Gatty Author, Podcaster, Blogger

For many years, Bob Gatty worked as a writer, editor, and communications consultant, based on the Washington, DC area with a focus on government and politics. He began at The Pittsburgh Courier, an African American weekly, covering crime and the courts. His salary was $55 per week before moving on to two local Pennsylvania dailies. At age 24, he began reporting for United Press International covering state politics in Pennsylvania and then New Jersey, where he was UPI’s state capitol bureau in Trenton.

Tempted by the allure of Washington, DC and big-time politics, at age 29 Bob became press secretary and chief of staff for two Congressmen – first Republican Edwin B. Forsythe, and then Democrat James J. Florio, who later became governor of New Jersey and until his recent death was a frequent podcast guest and co-host of Bob’s NFN Radio News podcast (now called Lean to the Left).

After seven years on Capitol Hill, Bob opened a communications business in Washington, first providing political media consulting to candidates and then freelance Washington coverage for business and trade magazines, plus creative communications services for trade and professional associations, including social media. This work involved articles and analyses of key governmental developments affecting businesses, such as the food and Health industries, retailing, and the environment.

His work as a communications consultant to trade and professional associations included launching and editing association publications, providing website content and social media assistance, and covering conferences and conventions.

Bob retired from G-Net Strategic Communications in 2016 and moved to Myrtle Beach, SC, where he launched his blog site, first called Not Fake News, now known as Lean to the Left.

Hijacked Nation
In August, 2020, Bob and co-author Chris Waldron, one of Lean to the Left's most loyal and prolific contributor, published "Hijacked Nation-Donald Trump's Attack on America's Greatness," a two-volume compilation of blogs regarding Trump's presidency and the consequences for our nation. A followup volume was published by Luna Global Media in September 2024. It is available at https://amzn.to/4ePrTF7 .

In all three volumes, blogs from Not Fake News and Lean to the Left create a virtual play-by-play of key actions of the Trump administration and Congress. For more information, please visit https://leantotheleft.net/books/, and visit Bob's Author's Page on Amazon, https://www.amazon.com/stores/Bob-Gatty/author/B08C7HWXZ5?ref=ap_rdr&isDramIntegrated=true&shoppingPortalEnabled=true&ccs_id=4e603563-7251-4074-b54d-40800c4ce40a.

The Lean to the Left Podcast
The Lean to the Left podcast provides commentary and interviews with newsmakers and others with interesting stories to tell. Video and audio podcasts stream twice weekly on major channels. More info at https://podcast.leantotheleft.net.

The Lean to the Left YouTube Channel
You'll find all of the audio tracks for the Lean to the Left Podcast here plus original videos, including complete video versions of each podcast.
https://www.youtube.com/@LeantotheLeft.

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