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última version al 01:17 7 abr 2012

Opinion concerning the Trayvon Martin taking pictures is sharply divided through race, a new USA Today/Gallup ballot finds.

The divide is clear, while pollsters requested if George Zimmerman, the Group Watch volunteer who shot and killed the black, unarmed youngster, used to be responsible of a crime.

A little bit more than part of the African Americans polled said he was "undoubtedly guilty," whereas solely 15 % of non-blacks shared the identical opinion.

Blacks had been paying extra attention to the case.

Seventy-two % of blacks mentioned race performed a "major factor" in "the events that led as a lot as the capturing," whereas 35 % of non-blacks mentioned the same.

People were divided by manner of race while pollsters requested if Zimmerman might have "been arrested if the individual he shot used to be white." seventy three percent said he might have been arrested; 40 percent of non blacks mentioned the same.

So what does all of this mean, beyond the obvious? Gallup takes a stab at some evaluation tying it to the O.J. Simpson case from the '90s. They write:

"U.S. public opinion about the Trayvon Martin case in Florida displays the identical kind of racial divide present in 1995 surveys asking concerning the murder trial of O.J. Simpson in Los Angeles. In one Gallup ballot conducted Oct. 5-7, 1995, for instance, seventy eight% of blacks stated the jury that discovered Simpson no longer responsible of murder made the correct resolution, while solely forty two% of whites agreed.

"The state of affairs in the Trayvon Martin case is completely different from the Simpson scenario, nonetheless, as a result of the victim, rather than the alleged wrongdoer, is black. Still, both conditions, though 17 years apart, it appears faucet into the same deeply felt views of the common black American that the prison justice machine in The united states is biased against blacks. Underscoring this conclusion, a 2008 Gallup Minority Rights and Members of the family survey discovered that 67% of blacks said the American justice device was once biased towards blacks, a perspective solely 32% of non-Hispanic whites agreed with. Take a look at Trayvon Martin Tees.

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