Trayvon Martin: Should Geraldo be fired for his 'mind-boggling' hoodie theory? - Geraldo Rivera sparks an outcry by suggesting that the black Florida teen's clothes were as responsible for his death as the shooter was
Geraldo Rivera, host of the Fox News show Geraldo at Large, is facing an angry backlash for suggesting that Trayvon Martin, the black Florida teen shot dead by neighborhood watchman George Zimmerman, was targeted because he was wearing a hooded sweatshirt that made him look like a criminal. "Every time you see someone stick up a 7-Eleven, the kid is wearing a hoodie," Rivera said on Fox & Friends. "I think the hoodie is as much responsible for Trayvon Martin's death as George Zimmerman was." Should Rivera's bosses throw the book at him for making such an "incendiary" remark?
Rivera deserves a harsh punishment: Rivera's "mind-boggling" assertion "sends out a very dangerous message," says Joe Gandelman at The Moderate Voice: That it's "understandable" for someone to shoot a kid who's wearing a hoodie. If Rivera were "on any other network than Fox he'd be demoted." Fortunately, Rivera's own words have already discredited him more than getting suspended or fired would.
But his bosses may give him a medal: Fox "can't admit that a young black male was innocent," says Steve M. at No More Mister Nice Blog, because it's long told its audience that African Americans "are evil or criminal or rendered incapable of responsible citizenship after years of dwelling on the 'liberal plantation.'" With national outrage over Martin's death boiling over, the channel's bosses can't push that bogus ideology themselves, so they "let the Latino guy take the hit." Rivera did them proud.
Actually, he has a point... sort of: "I do get what Rivera is saying," says Ed Morrissey at Hot Air. Clothes make a statement to those around us, and there are people who connect hoodies and crime. But "that doesn't mean that baggy pants or a hoodie makes you complicit in your own death when someone shoots you" because your attire scares him. Rivera's hardly the first person to fall for the "blame-the-victim impulse," although he did take it to an absurd new level. ( The Week )
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