I wouldn't mind debating UFP policies, but I'm going to let it slide because there's enough other stuff to discuss and my post was already getting long.
FaxModem1 wrote: ↑2017-09-06 06:05pmSpartan's sentence was 70 years, they let him out after 40 because they needed to stop Phoenix, and he was the one who did so. Whatever rehabilitation program he was going through, it probably wasn't done cooking yet. Perhaps the really violent tendencies he had were going to be completely gone by the time he woke up?
Friendly couldn't have been around for more than maybe a few years, so Cocteau couldn't have had the idea to "Supervillian" Simon for too terribly long. But that seems to have been enough time to dial Simon's murderous tendencies up to 11, while also programming him with "I know Kung-Fu," the "no shoot Cocteau," and advanced knowledge of their computer systems.
There's no reason Spartan (or anyone) wouldn't come out of the system singing "Armour Hotdogs." If they backtracked on Spartan's conditioning (to get him into "bust Phoenix again" mode) in the <24 hours they had the idea before thawing him, then it's even crazier the amount of control they have over people in Cyro.
Cocteau, based on dialog, doesn't seem to WANT a bunch of lobotimzied sheep. He wants them to willingly give him all the power so they turn themselves into lobotomized sheep. Those that can't hang are either kicked out or Cryoed. But we don't even know who gets put on ice as the movie suggests only violent people get put there. This is in contrast to something like 1984 where the act of THINKING about breaking the law was as bad to the system as actually doing so.
Independent thought is discouraged by Cocteau, so the cops don't even think to search the sewers , or looking at their society through a harsh lens, until someone used to actually investigating, like Spartan, does so. Remember, their first go-to action is to consult the Police computer on what to do, and follow it like gospel. Meaning that they can't arrest Friendly to 'rehabilitate' him.
Taking your post at face-value: Cocteau can think for himself. And he's obsessed with Friendly. He couldn't order them? Dialog seems to suggest Cocteau doesn't have complete power of the populace, that's why he wants to get people "really intimidated." So it's likely the cops don't see Friendly as a threat on the level Cocteau does. He's really just a nuisance. While this makes sense, it also suggests the cops are still functioning people.
They aren't helpless. As we've talked about, they have issues with problems outside their context, but once motivated they are capable of getting the job done one way or the other. There's something else at play here other than "they are mindless sheep and kept that way through rigorous conditioning."
Onto Demolition Man:
The Blue Wall does seem to exist here, as there are people arrested for swearing, because after repeated swearing, the computer dispatches police to Phoenix's location to deal with him for it(police were already on the way for his murderdeathkill, but that didn't seem to matter), while police and Cocteau are only fined.
SA police seem to police themselves quite well. Given the chance, the offending officer would likely reprimand him/herself. It's been noted that the word used was "reprimand" (which I honestly didn't remember). It seems more like a stern talking to than anything.
That clearly shows a difference in how such citizens are treated. The police's bold plan for catching Phoenix, if you remember, is also to wait until he kills others, as opposed to investigating. Huxley is also a firm believer in the system, she is just bored and wants to catch some bad guys. And yet she does so through politeness and proper police work.
And that plan fails spectacularly because neither they nor the computer have any context for a guy like Phoenix. Once they run into that, they panic for a bit, then immediately through some brainstorming come up with a solution. If they were so well conditioned against independent thought, that would have been much more difficult for them.
I've said before, if the conditioning is so great, why is it broken so easily? They literally gets exposed to something once (maybe twice), something they had to have run into before (but we'll say they didn't) and it's go time.
FaxModem1 wrote: ↑2017-09-06 06:05pmIn a world run by 'evil Mr. Rogers', she is their Dirty Harry.
Dirty Harry wouldn't be tolerated in a current police system on of himself. If he stocked his office with... I don't know, drugs he had seized, illegal types of pornography, and endangered Pandas: he would be gone. I get that's excessive, but current U.S. (aside from bullshit laws like "can't own more than 2 dildos") contraband tends to be dangerous or obtained illegally in the first place (child pornography).
The idea that Huxley bucks authority but is still a good police officer means the system can tolerate deviation. It can make exceptions. This is generally not something you would find in a tightly controlled dystopia. Brave New World tolerated this by keeping the free-thinking types away from society while still using their talents for other things. If fact, IIRC, the system was meant to produce people like that, but also to keep the general populace from knowing it.