You continue to post that ridiculous bs as if it bore some resemblance to Zimmernan's experience. Why haven't you checked that bizarre crap against the physical evidence?michael said:Imagine your daughter looks at some man the wrong way, he takes offence, confronts her with a punch to her nose breaking it and sending blood spaying across her face; as she stumbles to the ground he pounces. Following a series of martial art body punches to her chest he then grabs her skull and starts repeatedly bashing it into the curb of the sidewalk while whispering to her she's going to die. Blacking out from repeated blunt trauma to her head and with blood gelling in her hair from the lacerations - she shoots him.
Please. If you actually look at that picture, you will see a couple of mild abrasions on Zimmerman's nose, which is not bleeding from the nostrils (couple of scratches on the tip) and does not appear to be broken.youreyes said:you are supporting an ïnnocent student who...walked up to this man on a street and did THIS to him and told that he will KILL him...
That guy did not take much, if any, beating at all. I've hurt myself worse than that trying to open a can of tuna fish. Head wounds bleed heavily for their size, and I've bled more than that photo from picking my nose - the times I've actually broken it, the main symptom was that the bleeding was severe and wouldn't quit. Do we have any actual evidence that Martin broke Zimmerman's nose? That Martin ever punched Zimmerman at all?
Not that anyone would be surprised if Martin had hit him - he was certainly within his rights to do so, given Zimmerman's behavior. But Zimmerman was not seriously beaten that night, by anyone.
And the trivial damage to Zimmerman's face matches the physical evidence on Zimmerman's hands, which were unmarked (no self-defense at all), and on Martin's hands and clothes, which was nothing much - how Martin managed to pound on a guy's bloody face and beat his head on the sidewalk without getting any blood on his hands or clothing, without hurting his hands, without discovering the gun, without doing any more damage than the petty stuff Zimmerman suffered, is a mystery with an easy solution: Zimmerman made the whole thing up. And that was the conclusion of the lead forensic witness in the trial, who stated that the physical evidence did not support in any respect and contradicted in several, even Zimmerman's final account (let alone the several he tried out in the weeks before his arrest).