It is something of a sad fact that many people have great decisions that will change their lives made largely by people too dim to get out of jury duty.

It isn't very hard. Tell the judge that you think police are whit knights and invariably right and correct in their judgments. That anyone accused of a crime by a policeman is obviously a crook who deserves the worse punishment the state can met out.

Equally easy to play it the other way.

LEOs are scum who couldn't hold down an honest job or make it as a self-respecting criminal. So they hide behind a gun, badge and attitude and get to play the self-righteous bully who trades threats for all the coffee and doughnuts they can consume. Anyone accused by the state is obviously just an honest citizen who made the mistake of not kissing a LEO's rump.

Either way expressing a intractable bias for or against the law pretty much makes sure you aren't going to be on any jury. It is both simple and easy to get out of jury duty.

That said I have always served when called. I found the exposure to the legal process to be informative and often entertaining. It is also my civic duty. Part of being in a nation of laws and having the right to have guilt or innocence determined by a jury.

Any one of us could be accused of a crime. Just be in the wrong place and time. I don't want to be judged only by those too stupid not to know how get out of it or, ironically, too contemptuous of their civic duty to want to think it right that they should.

IMO you live in a society and owe it at least a nominal compliance to its rules and ideals. Pay taxes, do your duty in service and jury, have an understanding of and participate in the debates of the day, and vote.