Social anxiety and fear of being arbitrarily arrested
It's a coping mechanism for dealing with constant police brutality and bullying by police officers, and life in a drug-dealing red-light district.

A person with social anxiety disorder feels symptoms of anxiety or fear in situations where they may be scrutinized, evaluated, or judged by others,
The slightest social awkwardness in any public places often does lead to being detained for involuntary mental evaluation and judgment.
such as speaking in public, meeting new people, dating, being on a job interview, answering a question in class, asking for help, or having to talk to a cashier in a store.
Again, if a cashier in a store feels uncomfortable, or just doesn't like you, she can have you arrested or banned from the store and leave you with a criminal record that will cripple your future, prevent you from socializing or traveling, and significantly curtail your freedom for the rest of your life.
Doing everyday things, such as eating or drinking in front of others or using a public restroom, may also cause anxiety or fear due to concerns about being humiliated, judged, or rejected.
Again, if you live in or near a community that "rejects" you, they can have you arrested for criminal trespassing, banned from public places, or served with arbitrary trespass orders and barred from obtaining legal representation or appearing in court to contest them.
This fear often feels uncontrollable and can interfere with daily life. People with social anxiety disorder may worry about engaging in social situations for weeks before they happen. Sometimes, they end up avoiding places or events that cause distress or generate feelings of embarrassment.
Certainly, and this is very much the intent of so many arbitrary arrests in Alaska and other gutter districts in America.
It's embarrassing to be arrested, so we learn avoid the members of the community who constantly call cops on us, and stay away from public places where we've been advised that we are subject to arbitrary arrest.
Strange that it should be called a disorder, but some communities are very close-knit and extremely hostile to outsiders or targeted individuals who do not participate in their vices of sexual promiscuity and recreational drug use.
Avoidant personality disorder is marked by poor self-esteem and an intense fear of rejection. People with the condition often avoid social situations to avoid these feelings. Avoidant personality disorder is treatable with psychotherapy (talk therapy). Medication may help as well.
I'm just a piece of meat to be thrown in the back seat of a police car, and my self-esteem is irrelevant to these people's rejection of me and their ardent desire to have me carted off to jail in the back seat of a police car.
I apparently have a "disorder" because I avoid the drug dealers and gangsters who dominate many public places and opportunities to socialize in America's drug towns. There's always therapeutic medication available as an alternative to the recreational drugs that pushed so hard on the streets, and there's some people who charge money to talk, and others who constantly flap their jaws for free but ask for hush money to shut up.


And don't ever pull into a gas station where you're not invited, and you'd better check with the local police station if you actually have permission to buy gas at the gas station, or you could be arrested and lose your car by civil cause of trespassment in a court of law through delegation of trespassing authority by the business owner to local police protection rackets.


