Oh, So Now Impeachment Hoax Vindman Is Afraid to Speak Up?
Here's What Could Be Part of the 'Really Big News' Trump Will Drop...
You Won't Believe How This Democrat Lawmaker Is Trying to Beat a Traffic...
We Need Courage, Not Capitulation
A Former Clinton Advisor Is Warning Democrats About the Looming Communist Takeover
MS NOW Blames MAGA for Mamdani Erasing Italians
Does the Future of Conservative Economics Belong to Alexander Hamilton or to Milton...
A Driver Who Needed to Be Pulled Over
Russian Nationals Charged in Sprawling Cybercrime Scheme Targeting U.S. Infrastructure
Massachusetts Man Convicted of Illegally Exporting U.S. Tech to Iran
Rochester Man Charged With Threatening to Kill Donald Trump Jr.
Leftist Podcasters Trash Christianity and Homeschooling: 'It’s Child Abuse'
Two Dominican Nationals Sentenced for Stealing Americans' Identities to Steal From Medicai...
Tim Scott Reflects on What Comes Next After the Loss of Lindsey Graham
Kansas City Woman Indicted for Allegedly Bilking Nearly $40K in SNAP Benefits
Tipsheet

Smithsonian Institution: Can We Get Trayvon Martin’s Hoodie?

Smithsonian Institution: Can We Get Trayvon Martin’s Hoodie?

Let’s be clear. As Guy and many others have written, there are no winners in the Zimmerman acquittal. A young man is dead and another man’s life is irrevocably changed. In fact, Mr. Zimmerman can’t even get pulled over for speeding without the national press harassing him. So it’s very important we keep things in perspective.

Advertisement

But at the same time, is this a serious request?

A director at the Smithsonian Institution has expressed interest in acquiring the hooded sweatshirt worn by Travyon Martin on the night he was fatally shot by neighborhood watch volunteer George Zimmerman.

Lonnie Bunch, director of the Smithsonian's National Museum of African American History and Culture told The Washington Post Martin's hoodie represents an to further the discussion about race in America.

“It became the symbolic way to talk the Trayvon Martin case. It’s rare that you get one artifact that really becomes the symbol,” Bunch told the newspaper. “Because it’s such a symbol, it would allow you to talk about race in the age of Obama.”

Bunch, who has acquired a guard tower from Louisiana’s Angola State Penitentiary and the handcuffs used to restrain Harvard scholar Henry Louis Gates Jr. in 2009, said he'd like to have the hoodie for his collection once the legal case is over.

The Justice Department had placed a hold on evidence in the case, including Zimmerman's gun, as it conducts a civil rights investigation.

Advertisement

Never mind that Zimmerman was acquitted of murder and that by any objective measure he wasn’t a racist. One could argue he made a terrible decision the night Trayvon Martin was killed by getting out of his car, but that’s a far cry from perpetrating a hate crime. The assumption here is that an innocent teenager in Florida was targeted solely because of the color of his skin, and thus the sweatshirt in a sense represents black victimhood. But the facts of the case are much more complicated. Let’s also not forget that the media invented a new ethnicity -- “white Hispanic” -- to vilify Zimmerman as the poster boy for white racism even though Zimmerman himself is (in part) African-American.

This Smithsonian director argues we must preserve the sweatshirt for posterity so we can “talk about race in the age of Obama.” Question: Do we really need a sweatshirt to do that?

No, we don’t.

If we really wanted to have a conversation about race, we could start by discussing the unacceptable violence and black-on-black homicide rates in Chicago. More American citizens have been killed in the Windy City since 2001 than in Afghanistan. Think about that. And by the way, why is Sharpton et al. obsessed with this one case in particular -- as tragic and heartbreaking as it is -- but willing to ignore the countless and brutal crimes taking place every single day in America’s inner cities?

Advertisement

The sweatshirt is significant because it has become a symbolic item in a high-profile and polarizing judicial court case. But hanging it up on display in a Smithsonian museum just seems like desperate political opportunism. It is an obvious attempt to politicize and racialize a young man’s death -- a tragedy that even a Martin family attorney has said on the record, as Allahpundit reminded us yesterday, had nothing to do with race.

Join the conversation as a VIP Member

Recommended

Trending on Townhall Videos

Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement