No one, except Zimmerman himself, knows who initiated the confrontation.
"You have a problem?"
Is that slang for "Hi Sir, how can I help you?"
There were no injuries to Martin outside of the bullet wound, None, Zilch, Nada - and yet people here still want to hold on to dear life that Zimmerman threw the first punch?
You do know that you can hit someone and not leave any injuries - or throw a punch and miss. Right? I mean, you do know that?
Sure if Zimmerman was a Ninja since not only did he not leave any marks, but was so stealthy that not a single eye witness can testify witnessing attempting to throw a punch. Absent evidence you can't just go wildly speculating that you think Zimmerman started the altercation with nothing but your narrative to back it up. This "unkown" is what the traybots have been reduced to at this point.
I took an evidence class in law school with a judge who was appointed to our appellate division shortly after I took the class. He will be on the State Supreme Court one day and will most likely be one of the more celebrated jurists we have in our state because at the end of the day the guy is crazy smart and not a single practicing attorney I know can come up with one shred of complaint about him. He knows the law he is dealing with cold, is massively professional and is pretty much the very definition of what a good judge should be. In other words, he my I wanna be like Mike guy in my profession.
He came into class the first day in a room of probably 70 of us. Walked down the isle to the podium, and began making himself a bowl of cereal. And he went through the whole process and ate it in front of us. When he was done he cleaned up after himself and then without ever looking at a single sheet of paper started making us stand up one at a time calling us by full name (he has a photographic memory) and making us testify as a witness to the crime of killing the cereal. Not a single one of us had the same story, saw the same thing, described it the same way or anything. Many were unable to even come up with the words for what they saw. It was one of the more mindbending things I witnessed in law school.
It led to an entire evidence class based on that one act and how evidence rules are what they are, how layman understand or don't understand them, how they trip you up in court, how witnesses can be unreliable, how the story can always change and so on and so on. Our final for the class? Usual evidence rule stuff and then an essay on what we saw 15 weeks earlier in the murder of the bowl of cereal. It might have been the hardest thing I ever did that meant really nothing outside of a grade.
All this to say, evidence rules are massively complicated, and witness testimony is as well. Seconds after seeing something, people see different things. Months to years later, it's even worse. Basing your i-existence on the witness testimony of a criminal trial in Florida in a venue which you clearly have no understanding for (and that's not a dig, I don't understand all the rules in Florida) and posting like you have sense of validity behind your opinion more than just the right to have an opinion comes off as massively childish. Your hyperbole about ninjas, witnesses not having the same story and calling people that disagree with you traybots when their opinions seem to be pretty much the equal of yours only coming to different conclusions, is remarkably short sighted. The reason people are morons for representing themselves in court when there is any serious matter of any serious consequence is for the very reason your post is ridiculous. Without understanding of the rules of evidence and the nuances in each rule, not to mention the statutory and common law of the criminal code of Florida, you might as well be having a debate about the merits of masturbation with a fungo bat.