As I went back to reading the headlines it suddenly hit me that you, my crimefighters, are far more at risk from the type of incident in Florida than the rather spectacular fate of getting hit by Apophis or any other space rocks or debris. The problem we have as humans is we aren't real good at evaluating risk, and if we don't evaluate it properly we can't compensate for it.
See, if you don't perceive a risk you can’t really do things to avoid it or harden the target of that risk. Worse still, often we know about a risk but we stop avoiding or shielding ourselves from a threat because routine has daily taught us that the odds of that specific threat or risk are about as likely as that asteroid hitting our patrol vehicle with us in it.
The problem is we often see life as a basic statistical problem and we figure we can average our risks day to day, call to call, and just steel ourselves for what we believe are high-risk activities. Taleb Nassim, in his book "The Black Swan," describes the life of a turkey as a great example of how past experience isn't a good model for future events. Up until its last day the turkey has no experience other than the farmer as a benevolent host providing all its needs without fail…then comes Thanksgiving.
Nassim's point is, don't predict your next stop or call will involve only "yes" people and low threats. As he says, "Just because you haven't died yet doesn't mean you're immortal!" I don't mean to scare you…oh, wait…I do mean to scare you enough to keep your guard up, your armor and seat belt on, and your head in the game all the time.
One of the surest ways to fail is to think that someone or some situation is predictable. Getting your mind right going into every situation is essential, and too often we are better at "thinking" about the threat of an asteroid than the threats we face on the traffic stop we are initiating.