Bottom line, if you think that this guy protecting his family and his property from an obvious burglar at 2am with a gun makes him a monster, it's obvious that the racism card serves no other purpose than emotional appeal. You cannot possibly believe that he wanted to kill a black person because of racial hate. You cannot possibly believe that if the intruder was white, Hispanic, Asian, or other, he would not be dead as well. You are exposed as inserting race artificially into a situation where it is clearly irrelevant, as a trump card conduit for your real agenda. Which is a belief that any guns being used in any situation at any time for any reason should be outlawed. It's pretty obvious, and this case in particular, to me points that out.
With Trayvon, the court evidence proved that he had attacked Zimmerman and he acted in self defense. But the court of public opinion isn't so sure his life was in danger. In fact, most of the public don't even realize there was a scuffle. In either case, Zimmerman was "asking for it" by following him to begin with. While I disagree with this notion, at least that is somewhat of a reasonable notion. In no way, shape, or form was this guy doing anything wrong by protecting his house, himself, and his family. I'm not a lawyer, but I had always thought that if someone had broken and entered your property, it was game on to kill the motherfuckers under reasonable suspicion that your life is in danger, let alone your valuable property. No one's borrowing sugar at 2am on a week night through your back door in your gated back yard. No one.
Also, as for the "threatening move" the kid made, while I'm 100% on the defense's side in this, I think it's pretty obvious his lawyer advised him to say that. His word against a dead person's. Because apparently had it not been for the "threatening move", the breaking and entering with an attempt to rob him blind and possibly hurt him and his family wasn't enough to warrant shooting.