Totally Unfuzzed

"The unspoken power dynamics in a police/civilian encounter will generally favor the police, unless the civilian is a local sports hero, the mayor, or a giant who is impervious to bullets ... Most social interactions proceed according to implicitly understood rules, and there are unspoken potential penalties for violating those rules. When your boss greets you with a paternal clap on the shoulder, you know you’re not supposed to reciprocate by pinching his cheek. When a police officer initiates a conversation, you know you’re not supposed to run away. - from "How About a Friendly Frisking?: The Myth of the 'Consensual' Police Encounter"


Also from Slate's new crime columnist: the applicant at an FBI job interview who, in seeing honesty to a fault meet to his occasion, squealed on himself over his child-porn stash. The judge's dry opinion reads like a John Cleese voiceover from a sketch on How To Be Seen.

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