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Being out on bond is not the same as being a free person. People should understand that it's conditional. Where I live, a person out on bond (or on probaton/parole) is going to have more trouble with LE, for even a minor infraction.
Barry needs to keep his nose (and everything else) clean, if he is to be treated as a regular US citizen who is accused as he is. Frankly, I think he's been handled with kid gloves. Privilege is dripping off of him. But why? (Rhetorical question - we can't really discuss it in the main threads).
Well, I can discuss one aspect: the image that Suzanne created and helped him bring to town. You've seen her. Style is a real thing. She did not neglect substance either (that's a given: she was kind, courteous, compassionate, smiling, sweet, mild).
It's important in small tourist towns (very). And the two of them became not only solid citizens, but a kind of symbol of what better-off Salidans could be (living near the river, in a mansion, beautiful daughters, great clothes, winning smiles, no one seems to need braces, their photos never have an errant detail).
Small towns can be quite protective of certain people (almost never women - SD is experiencing repercussions bouncing off of Barry's situation; I doubt she'd have two R/O's if not for Barry...Barry only has a few more than SD, for gosh sakes - and he's an accused murderer). The men in small towns may feel personally responsible for certain behaviors that might have encouraged someone like Barry to buy his own PR. It's scary because once one guy goes bad, what happens next? What if it's true that "Everyone liked Barry" and saw him nearly every day, toodling around with his Bobcat. No one cared if he was having affairs or not (or if he paid his taxes, etc). They just liked him for his surface, because that's what people do.
I think most of you get my point.
Barry needs to keep his nose (and everything else) clean, if he is to be treated as a regular US citizen who is accused as he is. Frankly, I think he's been handled with kid gloves. Privilege is dripping off of him. But why? (Rhetorical question - we can't really discuss it in the main threads).
Well, I can discuss one aspect: the image that Suzanne created and helped him bring to town. You've seen her. Style is a real thing. She did not neglect substance either (that's a given: she was kind, courteous, compassionate, smiling, sweet, mild).
It's important in small tourist towns (very). And the two of them became not only solid citizens, but a kind of symbol of what better-off Salidans could be (living near the river, in a mansion, beautiful daughters, great clothes, winning smiles, no one seems to need braces, their photos never have an errant detail).
Small towns can be quite protective of certain people (almost never women - SD is experiencing repercussions bouncing off of Barry's situation; I doubt she'd have two R/O's if not for Barry...Barry only has a few more than SD, for gosh sakes - and he's an accused murderer). The men in small towns may feel personally responsible for certain behaviors that might have encouraged someone like Barry to buy his own PR. It's scary because once one guy goes bad, what happens next? What if it's true that "Everyone liked Barry" and saw him nearly every day, toodling around with his Bobcat. No one cared if he was having affairs or not (or if he paid his taxes, etc). They just liked him for his surface, because that's what people do.
I think most of you get my point.
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