I fully understand the problems and the ironies of bureaucracies. Having worked for both a large city and a statewide agency I know the nature and problems these systems create. It isn't a coincidence that the greatest stressor in law enforcement is not fear of death or anything associated with the great adventure of crime fighting. No, it's administrative stress that tends to really bother us.
We take high sensation-seeking folks like you and put you in a highly structured inflexible bureaucracy and are shocked when we discover that it stresses the heck out of you. The fact that the average law enforcement officer dies far younger than the average citizen is not hard to understand when we combine the stresses of shift work, poor diets, high divorce rates, the sedentary nature of the job, and the cold rigidity of the bureaucracy.
How often do we find ourselves in the situation above, playing the TSA part, the Costello part? "No ma'am, our policy doesn't allow us to..." I am sure you can fill in the rest of that sentence. The issue for us is how do we maintain our optimism and spirit working within a bureaucracy?
First, you've got to accept there is no other way to do the function of government. We are always going to have bureaucracies and sometimes we just have to put our heads down and keep going.
I don't mean in a helpless, "poor me" way, but with a warrior's stoicism. Oxymorons, Catch 22's, Mickey Mouse, all abound in every aspect of the government, from the military to maintenance, from the presidency to the mayor's office; we will always have someone trying to make the "touch!" We just have to chuckle and get our jobs done.