JackRiddler wrote:The question should be why this isn't always a big story - why and how the corporate media and the dominant cultural and societal institutions have successfully distracted from and ignored widespread systemic, group and sometimes (as in this case) exemplary individual violence that serves to maintain racist stratification, starting from the top with the racial targeting of the bogus "war on drugs" to feed the prison-industrial complex with young black men (mostly) who are as a general result punished, disenfranchised and cut out of the economy for life.
I agree, I wasn't questioning the legitimacy of this issue, just the MSM's motive in covering it. I was thinking more of along the lines of generating a conversation similar to what Simulist wrote about earlier:
Trayvon Martin's murder highlights a number of realities in America that most-assuredly should not exist. While I do not think it's a "staged distraction" either, I do think it is already proving USEFUL to those who shape opinions in America — useful especially on the would-be "Left," as do-nothing "liberal" politicians once again try to woo their base back into believing this election year that there really is a functional two-party system in America, that there really are appreciable differences between these "two" political parties two wings of the Republican Party, and that Obama and the Democrats really are "on our side."
On second thought, however, I believe I may have been focusing on the wrong aspect of this situation. I wasn't trying to downplay the importance of a discussion about Trayvon Martin, and other similar cases, it's just that I've grown cynical and apathetic in regards to media and polotics in this country. I've gotten to the point that I no longer watch or read mainstream news outlets in order to find out what going on in the world, I only watch them find out what angle the corpocracy is going to try to take on a given issue, and how their going to try to manipulate things to their own ends.
Hopefully this time it will be different.