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g B-37s comments. They 
simply said in the end we did what the law required us 
to do.And that is where we must do better.The limits of the 
law are no excuse for failing to give justice to the family 
of a dead, unarmed teen who had his whole life ahead of 
him. It is no excuse for leaving another man, Zimmerman, as a 
target of hate for the rest of his life.No matter where you 
stand on the outcome of the Martin-Zimmerman case, President Obama's admonition 
Friday for us all to stop and do a little soul searching 
here is on the money.We have to demand more of our prosecutors, 
our media, our juries, ourselves.Juan Williams is a Fox News political analyst. 
He is the author of several books including "Enough: The Phony Leaders, 
Dead-End Movements, and Culture of Failure That Are Undermining Black America--and 
What We Can Do About It" and "Muzzled: The Assault on Honest 
Debate."			        	
		          
  			       
 			    Race politics responsible for 
Zimmerman trial?			        
			         
   			      
  			    Did the media 
turn Zimmerman into a 'monster'?FILE -- July 13, 2013: George Zimmerman 
leaves court with his family after Zimmerman's not guilty verdict was read 
in Seminole Circuit Court in Sanford, Fla.  Jurors found Zimmerman not 
guilty of second-degree murder in the fatal shooting of 17-year-old Trayvon 
Martin.President Barack Obama gestures as he speaks during his daily news 
briefing at the White House, Friday, July 19, 201
t take that at all to mean that we're 
constructing reality," he told LiveScience.All in the mindAs members of 
society, people create a form of collective reality. "We are all part 
of a community of minds," Freeman says in the show.For example, money, 
in reality, consists of pieces of paper, yet those papers represent something 
much more valuable. The pieces of paper have the power of life 
and death, Freeman says but they wouldn't be worth anything if people 
didn't believe in their power.Money is fiction, but it's useful fiction.Another 
fiction humans collectively engage in is optimism. Neuroscientist Tali Sharot 
of University College London studies "the optimism bias": people's tendency 
to generally overestimate the likelihood of positive events in their lives 
and underestimate the likelihood of negative ones.In the show, Sharot does 
an experiment in which she puts a man in a brain scanner, 
and asks him to rate the likelihood that negative events, such as 
lung cancer, will happen to him. Then, he is given the true 
likelihood.When the actual risks differ from the man's estimates, his frontal 
lobes light up. But the brain area does a better job of 
reacting to the discrepancy when the reality is more positive than what 
he guessed, Sharot said.This shows how humans are somewhat hardwired to 
be optimistic. That may be because optimism "tends to have a lot 
of positive outcomes," Sharot told LiveScience. Optimistic people tend to 
live longer
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