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# Pan-Am Games Civics Lab

It occurs to me that, with the [Pan-Am
Games](http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Integrated_Security_Unit) coming up, you
have a prime opportunity to do some hands-on learning about Toronto civics and
policing. (Those of you who did this lab during the G20 summit are excused. If
you are already at risk of police harassment, you are excused. If you've never
been stopped by a cop in your life, this exercise will determine 70% of your
grade.)

Your assignment: do some things that are completely within your rights and
harmless to others.

1. Dress in lower-middle class drag. Put away the props and costumes of
   authority: no suits, no loafers. Jeans, sneakers, t-shirts, jackets are all
   in: things chosen as much for their wearability and anonymity as for their
   looks. Break them in, if you can; you'll visibly break character if
   everything is shop new.

2. Keep quiet. Tell your family where you're going - for safety - but not
   social media. If you have an assistant, tell him you're going out, but not
   where you're going. Make it as hard as possible for anyone to connect you to
   any authority or celebrity your day job gives you.

3. Get a camera. The more visible, the better; you can rent one from Vistek for 
   a totally achievable number of dollars. Get a strap, too; carrying a camera
   by hand is tiring.

4. Go alone.

5. Take a long, slow stroll along the Pan-Am Games' security perimeter.

You will absolutely be stopped by the police Integrated Security Unit, either
through a Toronto officer or an RCMP officer. Remember, you are entirely within
your rights to be there, with a camera, walking.

It's important that you do this _without_ the trappings of authority and
without witnesses. Be powerless. Experience an unjustified police stop as
someone who has no immediate recourse.

That experience is no fun. It's in turns demeaning, terrifying, embarassing,
and disempowering. [For some Torontonians, this is a daily
event](http://www.torontolife.com/informer/features/2015/04/21/skin-im-ive-interrogated-police-50-times-im-black/).

_Then_ come back and talk to me about the Toronto Police Service's [carding
program](http://www.thestar.com/news/city_hall/2015/04/20/toronto-police-carding-policy-reform-will-require-super-powers-james.html).