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Roland Martin
By Roland Martin, CNN Contributorupdated 12:32 PM EDT, Sat March 24, 2012

A fight for Trayvon Martin is a war against stereotypes

(CNN) -- As I walked the streets of New York the other day, I saw several white youths with hoodies, tattoos and nose rings. Not one time did it enter my mind that they could be skinheads.

While walking into the Howard University Hospital in Washington earlier that day, a few African-Americans rocked various types of hoodies. There wasn't a knot in my stomach; I didn't cross the street out of fear, and no, I didn't nervously look around for a cop or two.

As a native of Houston, I grew up in a black neighborhood. Went to a black church. Attended mostly black schools. I've seen every kind of black person possible. The drug dealer. The doctor. The bully. The postal worker. The crack addict. The city councilman. And never have I walked in fear of black folks who have given me no reason to be scared.

Oh, let's be clear, I've seen a group of menacing looking black folks who scared the hell out of me. But I can say the same for whites, Hispanics and Asians.

What the Trayvon Martin shooting should tell us is that the stereotypes that we have of people can have deadly consequences. Martin was nothing more than a young man wearing athletic shoes, jeans and a hoodie. For George Zimmerman, that's the uniform of a suspicious person. And it apparently was that simple observation that led Zimmerman to follow Martin in his car, get out, confront Martin and eventually shoot him fatally.

It has been amazing to listen to the reaction of some folks. But nothing got me more charged up than hearing Geraldo Rivera say on "Fox and Friends" that by wearing a hoodie, Martin contributed to his own death.

"When you see a kid walking down the street, particularly a dark-skinned kid like my son Cruz — who I constantly yelled at when he was going out wearing a damn hoodie or those pants around his ankles. 'Take that hood off!' People look at you and what's the instant identification, what's the instant association? It's those crime scene surveillance tapes," Rivera said.

"Every time you see someone stickin' up a 7-11, the kid's wearing a hoodie. Every time you see a mugging on a surveillance camera or they get the old lady in the alcove, it's a kid wearing a hoodie. You have to recognize that this whole stylizing yourself as a 'gangsta.' ... You're gonna be a gangsta wanna? Well, people are going to perceive you as a menace. That's what happens. It is an instant reflexive action."

He later added, "When you see a black or Latino youngster, particularly on the street, you walk to the other side of the street. You try to avoid that confrontation. Trayvon Martin, you know, God bless him, he was an innocent kid, a wonderful kid, a box of Skittles in his hands. He didn't deserve to die. But I'll bet you money, if he didn't have that hoodie on, that nutty neighborhood watch guy wouldn't have responded in that violent and aggressive way."

He might have thought he was well-meaning, but Geraldo, that's just nonsense. It wasn't Trayvon's hoodie that led to his death; it was the skin color. It was what was going through Zimmerman's mind when he saw the kid. We do a disservice to ourselves when we try to explain away such nonsense.

In a show of solidarity, all the Miami Heat took a photo wearing the team's hoodies, with their hands stuffed in their pockets. The leader of this effort was my good friend, Dwyane Wade. Wade also posted a picture of himself in a hoodie on his Facebook page and linked to it from Twitter tagged with "#hoodies #stereotypes #trayvonmartin"

"I'm a father," Wade told the South Florida Sun Sentinel. "It's support of the tragic thing that has taken place. No matter what color, race, we're all fathers."

The problem today is that minorities, especially men -- black men -- have long had to make accommodations for the negative view others have of us.

See, it doesn't matter about our degrees. Our fine, tailored suits don't matter. We've made all the accommodations to fit into this society. We've cut our hair. We are careful about the clothes we wear. We change how we talk so as not to sound threatening. We're fine, upstanding citizens. Yet we still are seen as suspicious. And in the case of Trayvon Martin, end up dead.

We are sick and tired of being seen as suspicious. We are sick and tired of being seen as a stereotype and not as a full human being. We are sick and tired of having to give our black boys "the talk" and still having to bury them so young.

As civil rights activist Fannie Lou Hamer stated so well: "We are sick and tired of being sick and tired."

For those who continue to tout this so-called post-racial America, look at the image of Trayvon Martin. You tell his parents that the age of Obama is a post-racial America. You tell his parents, Tracy Martin and Sybrina Fulton, that their son was judged by the content of his character and not the color of his skin.

Even President Barack Obama said on Friday that the killing of Trayvon Martin requires a national "soul-searching."

"If I had a son, he'd look like Trayvon," President Obama said.

America, no more. We will no longer accommodate your easily bruised feelings by clenching our teeth and praying it will all get better. No more. What do we want? Justice. When do we want it? Now. If you think for a moment that we will be satisfied with a police chief stepping down or press releases expressing outrage, you have another think coming.

This, folks, is war. This is war on racism. This is war on bigotry. This is war on stereotypes. This is a call to arms. This is time for the soldiers in the battle for social justice to stand up and say, "I report for duty, sir."

This fight will not become just a moment. We will not let that happen. This incident is about a movement. A movement for respect. A movement for decency. A movement to be treated equally, and not be stalked and stereotyped because of the amount of melanin in our skin.

Follow @CNNOpinion on Twitter


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Send Comments ASKFMB OPINION

Today is

All It Takes Is One..., The Rigth One...
And It Is On From There

Racism cannot be denied in this case.
Profiling cannot be denied in this case.
Police Department's conscious decision to not properly investigate this case cannot be denied.
Police Chief backing of his department’s ineptness cannot be denied. Police Chief taking a stance with Zimmerman cannot be denied.
DA's inaction cannot be denied.
A complete disregard for justice in this case cannot be denied.
A Law designed to fail cannot be denied.
A Law designed to allow a police department to opt not to investigate a shooting with the reasoning of "lack of evidence of not self defense", which nullifies any citizen’s ability to accuse a police department of wrongful investigation or completing a lack luster investigation base on race, cannot be denied.

The Death of Strayvon Martin and the subsequent discovered information, base on a quality gathering of information by news outlets and citizens, has provide us all with enough information to conclude that "Self Defense" was proven to be on Strayvon's side, leaving all Americans to wonder, how such a case could be construed as a Self Defense by Zimmerman.

A lack of action by the Stanford PD... provides the entire world with the evidence that blacks have been seeking for decades, against a racist citizen, a racist and inept police department, and how laws are designed to protect those chosen by a police department and not designed for all citizens, laws that are selectively enforced by police departments, which ensures that some will be victims of the entire judicial system.

Martin is correct; this is one that has galvanized the entire minority numbers in the U.S... to fight as one, against racism, profiling, and unfair laws. 

White Americans are tired of hearing about minorities complaints about the system, primarily because it's always only the minorities who are being victimized..., but, those fair minded white Americans now have proof, evidence of how 4 levels of social behavior directly affects minorities, which are "Racist Individuals, Racist or inept PDs, Flawed or inept DAs, and Mal Designed Laws".

The Fair minded white Americans will join the minorities in demanding that all racist be met with equal justice for their racist actions.

The Fight will take place at the polls, where minorities will join the fair white citizens, and vote out racist leaders, vote out those who turn their heads when racist and illegal acts take place, vote out ones that want to support all the mal behaved citizens, leaders and bad laws.

To all Democrats and Republicans....

Your are either for fair and equal treatment under the law, or your against fair and equal treatment under the law.

Sometimes, All It Takes Is One.

 

In My Opinion

ASMFMB
3/24/2012

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