
What killed Trayvon Martin? Demos senior fellow claims it is the "Gated Community Mentality"
By RICH BENJAMIN
New York Times Op-Ed
Published: March 29, 2012
As a black man who has been mugged at gunpoint by a black teenager late at night, I am not naïve: I know firsthand the awkward conundrums surrounding race, fear and crime. Trayvon Martin’s killing at the hands of George Zimmerman baffles this nation. While the youth’s supporters declare in solidarity “We are all Trayvon,” the question is raised, to what extent is the United States also all George Zimmerman?
Under assault, I didn’t dream of harming my teenage assailant, let alone taking his life.
Mr. Zimmerman reacted very differently, taking out his handgun and shooting the youth in cold blood.
What gives?
Welcome to gate-minded America.
From 2007 to 2009, I traveled 27,000 miles, living in predominantly
white gated communities across this country to research a book. I threw
myself into these communities with gusto — no Howard Johnson or Motel 6
for me. I borrowed or rented residents’ homes. From the red-rock canyons
of southern Utah to the Waffle-House-pocked exurbs of north Georgia, I
lived in gated communities as a black man, with a youthful style and
face, to interview and observe residents.
The perverse, pervasive real-estate speak I heard in these communities
champions a bunker mentality. Residents often expressed a fear of crime
that was exaggerated beyond the actual criminal threat, as documented by
their police department’s statistics. Since you can say “gated
community” only so many times, developers hatched an array of Orwellian
euphemisms to appease residents’ anxieties: “master-planned community,”
“landscaped resort community,” “secluded intimate neighborhood.”
No matter the label, the product is the same: self-contained,
conservative and overzealous in its demands for “safety.” Gated
communities churn a vicious cycle by attracting like-minded residents
who seek shelter from outsiders and whose physical seclusion then
worsens paranoid groupthink against outsiders. These bunker communities
remind me of those Matryoshka wooden dolls. A
similar-object-within-a-similar-object serves as shelter; from community
to subdivision to house, each unit relies on staggered forms of
security and comfort, including town authorities, zoning practices,
private security systems and personal firearms.
Residents’ palpable satisfaction with their communities’ virtue and
their evident readiness to trumpet alarm at any given “threat” create a
peculiar atmosphere — an unholy alliance of smugness and insecurity. In
this us-versus-them mental landscape, them refers to new immigrants,
blacks, young people, renters, non-property-owners and people perceived
to be poor.
Mr. Zimmerman’s gated community, a 260-unit housing complex, sits in a
racially mixed suburb of Orlando, Fla. Mr. Martin’s “suspicious” profile
amounted to more than his black skin. He was profiled as young,
loitering, non-property-owning and poor. Based on their actions, police
officers clearly assumed Mr. Zimmerman was the private property owner
and Mr. Martin the dangerous interloper. After all, why did the police
treat Mr. Martin like a criminal, instead of Mr. Zimmerman, his
assailant? Why was the black corpse tested for drugs and alcohol, but
the living perpetrator wasn’t?
Across the United States, more than 10 million housing units are in
gated communities, where access is “secured with walls or fences,”
according to 2009 Census Bureau data. Roughly 10 percent of the occupied
homes in this country are in gated communities, though that figure is
misleadingly low because it doesn’t include temporarily vacant homes or
second homes. Between 2001 and 2009, the United States saw a 53 percent
growth in occupied housing units nestled in gated communities.
Another related trend contributed to this shooting: our increasingly
privatized criminal justice system. The United States is becoming even
more enamored with private ownership and decision making around
policing, prisons and probation. Private companies champion private
“security” services, alongside the private building and managing of
prisons.
“Stand Your Ground”
or “Shoot First” laws like Florida’s expand the so-called castle
doctrine, which permits the use of deadly force for self-defense in
one’s home, as long as the homeowner can prove deadly force was
reasonable. Thirty-two states now permit expanded rights to
self-defense.
In essence, laws nationwide sanction reckless vigilantism in the form of
self-defense claims. A bunker mentality is codified by law.
Those reducing this tragedy to racism miss a more accurate and painful
picture. Why is a child dead? The rise of “secure,” gated communities,
private cops, private roads, private parks, private schools, private
playgrounds — private, private, private —exacerbates biased treatment
against the young, the colored and the presumably poor.

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