For some reason, I find that I sympathize with Marcus' father. He seems so innocent in how he believes that all of this security is helping the country get rid of terrorists. He wants to believe that this is helping the country get rid of terrorists and drug lords. Marcus, however, knows better and says so to his father. His father is so disbelieving that it seems like he's no naive.
Nothing in this section that I read struck me as imperative. I do know now, though, that Marcus is stubborn. Marcus wouldn't tell the officials what he had been doing at the scene of crime, saying that since he wasn't arrested he could not be forced to cooperate. That takes spunk and a killer stubborn streak. And I admire his candor, but it could get him killed.
There wasn't much that struck me as overly important in the section that I completed. So this is the end of my reflection
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