The case that refuses to go away is turning into a
Rorschach test. In the ink blots, Carter sees “the right decision” in “a nation
of laws.” Clinton discerns “deep, painful heartache” for families who “have to
fear for their child walking down a street in the United States of America.”
Now that Juror B37 has had her long Confessional with
Anderson Cooper and been rebuked by others, a deep division emerges between
those who expect everything to be rational and those who know that such mastery
of the mind is beyond human reach.
Journalists strive to be objective, but they soon
learn the impossibility of such a goal. Being fair, dispassionate and aware of
one’s own prejudices is as good as it gets. Politicians are not called to be
that way, but the very best try. Lawyers are paid to be truth-twisting
advocates.
As the talkative juror pours out her story, what
comes through is a state of mind manipulated into a literal reading of a set of
facts blinkered into “following the law” but abandoning common sense and human
feeling, a robotic concession to courtroom reality.
Over the years, during jury service, I have often
been amazed at the ability of a dozen disparate strangers to evaluate what they
have seen and heard and come to what struck me as the right decision. Their
wisdom may have been turned into a melodramatic cliché by “Twelve Angry Men,” but
such a basic collective sense of reality is, in the main, undeniable.
Jimmy Carter’s response to the verdict is, for a
long-time non-admirer, typical of the man—-a brilliant parser of facts that led
him into being a President with no emotional intelligence or empathy whatsoever
to complain about “a national malaise” that he himself helped create.
In last year’s election, voters responded to a huge
Rorschach test by seeing beyond the many Mitt Romneys flashing before their
eyes.
Now, as the Zimmerman case eventually fades away as
it must, three improbable figures are in New Hampshire—-Marco Rubio and Ted Cruz,
two Tea Party Latinos, and Rand Paul, the Anglo from Mars.
What will be voters see as those cards flash before
their eyes?
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