Trying to put Trayvon Martin, George Zimmerman, racism, gun
laws, stand your ground gun laws, and rogue Gov. Rick Scott into the context of
social biology has been trying. Although it is economically centered, the
Republican Party mantra of “hate the government” has to fit into the picture. It
seems as if the solution to my dilemma can be found in the rationalization vigilante
justice.
Republicans are advancing the idea that inadequate mechanism
for criminal punishment are either insufficient or nonexistence. This grows out of the idea of individualism: the
Marlboro cowboy. The people who see themselves as the tough hero wearing a big white
hat setting astride a large horse who is ready to climb down and punish anyone
who disagrees with him. The reference here is pointedly to “him” and not the
politically correct “him or her”. In
their minds, these people do not need anyone but themselves, which means no
amount of police or army protect will ever be adequate. It is based on self-preservation,
the individual right to protect ones self and all costs. Such people have a way
of extending these feelings to the community. What they are doing is justified because
it is a fulfillment of the wishes of “the community”; protect the family, the
community, the state and the nation—exaggerated chauvinism. This is where the patriotism
and the hero label come in. True or not, they feel they and “theirs” are better
than everyone else is, and it is their job to do “conserve” what is theirs.
Republicans, the guys on the big horses, easily define the
community as themselves (1%) and everybody else (99%). In a strange sort of way,
they seem to see minorities as being weak and needing protection. In the extremes
of slavery, they were selfishly protecting their property. This is, for
example, where the idea that slavery really helped black people by bringing
them out of Africa and into the great and wonderful world of the Untied States.
This is why a company CEO sees workers as needing them; they see jobs as if
they are doing something nice for the workers. The rich see themselves as the
makers and see the poor or takers who need them to suvive.
Of course, they cannot protect anyone if there are not bad
guys. The first warning sign of a bad person is if that someone is somehow different.
Skin color, language, religion, or anything else that would tell them that the
person of persons they are confronting are from a different tribe, hence have
not proved their trustworthiness. Every time there has been trouble, a stranger
has caused it, someone who is somehow different. No proof of misconduct is need,
in fact in the interest of self-protection; shoot first, and ask questions
later is the basis of frontier justice.
Psychologists use the term xenophobia meaning fear of
something but a big tough cowboy cannot be afraid of anything, especially being
afraid of those he is trying to protect, which would be to admit that he is not
a big tough guy. If they are to fulfill what they see as their commitment, they
must have the means to do so. A 98-pound weakling can have the Republican mind
set but only if he has a gun and is willing and able to use it.
Outside of the bestial world of our knuckle dragging
ancestors, we have established social order, hierarchy dominance with the
police as our representative authority and not the self-appointed guy on big
horse. The inherent conflict in all of this is obvious. If the folks who mistrust
the police, therefore feel the need to take law enforcement into their own
hands must have the legal right to do so or suffer the consequences. When the
voters gave Republicans the power, for example Rick Scott, stand your ground laws
were enacted along with legalize handguns, concealed carry, assault weapons,
etc. The National Rifle Association motivated by greed, the strongest of all genetic
traits, joined in to satisfy other genetically based traits fueled by the needs
of individualism: big weapons, the sense of being a protector and therefore hero,
the sense of being a force of right, etc.
All of this has consequences. We have George Zimmerman, a
self-appointed unpaid neighborhood security guard; with a legally owned gun in
his pocket, accosting and killing a black youth who he assumed was escaping
justice. The vigilante, protected by law, walked away from the incident a free
man. Thus, we have another case of wrongfully administer “vigilante justice”, a
lynching really.
URL: firetreepub.blogspot.com
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