Monthly Archives: December 2009

More Suspicionless Checkpoints in Torrance

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Filed under Diary

On Saturday, December 19th, 2009 Torrance Police Department operated another suspicionless checkpoint from 8:00 pm to 3:00 am.

The location of the checkpoint was ensconced in the eastbound lanes of the 4300 block of Pacific Coast Highway. This checkpoint was ostensibly conducted in an effort to reduce the number of persons killed and/or injured due to alcohol-related collisions.

During this operation, more than 1,600 vehicles were unconstitutionally searched, 11 drivers were caught driving under the influence, 16 drivers were caught and released for driving while unlicensed or on a suspended drivers license, and 23 vehicles were seized.

Torrance PD claims their goal is to reduce those senselessly injured or killed by impaired drivers as well as insure that drivers had valid drivers licenses.  It represents mission creep of the most basic sort because originally, the checkpoints were announced, all of date, time, and location.  The official purpose of announcing the details was to bring awareness to the program, but I believe the purpose of announcing the details was to get the public to accept the original proposal.  Over time, these announcements have become spotty and unreliable (see my previous mentions for details).

But since they got their foot in the door to conduct these unconstitutional searches without resistance, they have and will expand the purpose.  I have no doubt that eventually, Torrance will have nightly checkpoints, searching for anything they want.  How long it takes for them to creep up to it is difficult to say.

Police departments across the country hold, unofficially, that any action they take is legal until a court tells them it is illegal.  Which means if you want to resist this on principle, you must:

  1. Be aware of the checkpoint activity (even if they "forget" to post it).
  2. Be in a vehicle traveling on the correct road that night (if you can find their position).
  3. Be stopped (who knows, they might wave you through if their donut-run is eminent).
  4. Be asked to voluntarily wave your rights protected by the 4th and 5th Amendments.
  5. Be prepared to be assaulted if you do not wave the rights above.
  6. Be prepared to have your license revoked.
  7. Be prepared to have your vehicle seized and impounded.
  8. Be prepared to spend the night in jail.

If all of the above happens, you might then have a legal tort to begin the long arduous process of getting a complaint heard by the powers that be.  Even if you manage to get justice for standing up on principle, that doesn't mean the checkpoints will then stop.  So you'll have to be prepared to do it all again when the time comes.  How likely is it there is even one person living in or around Torrance with that kind of resources to devote to something like this?  So instead, we roll over and let them do whatever they want.

Torrance PD will eventually try to take it to the wall.  Citizens will not see this as for what it is.  They actually believe these checkpoints make everyone safer, so they'll gladly continue to give up incremental liberty to get what they think is a little extra safety.  This is what you want, right?

Posted via email from Anthony Martin's Weblog

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"Preventing H1N1" Billboard Near LAX

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Filed under Political

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Trusted Computing and Dialectics

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Filed under Political

This is one of my son Benjamin's favorite videos:

You might be wondering why I would show my six-year-old autistic son a geeky/pseudo-political video like this. Well, one of the things my wife and I have noticed about him is he loves to watch things like text scroll by on the screen. As result, he enjoys the credits of movies that do this. After discovering this, it occurred to me he might like this video too.

Sure enough, it's one of his favorites. It's really well done and very stylish. And I like how it helps to illustrates the concept of a "dialectic," although I know that idea is lost on Benjamin for the moment.

A dialectic is a method of argument. Specifically, it is the idea that one thing is presented as multiple things. If you tell someone they can have steak or carrots, you have presented a variation on a dialectic. Why not have both stake and carrots? Why not have neither? To shoehorn people into one or the other when other options are available is a dialectic.

A dialectic is similar to a false dichotomy (also known as a false dilemma). A false dichotomy is a specific kind of dialectic where the choices are supposed to be obvious. A dialectic can also obscure the choices. So instead of calling it "steak or carrots," someone might call it "Nutrition Choice" even though the choice has actually been narrowed artificially. I believe some people refer to this kind of dialectic as a "fnord" (but that's more of an obscure pop-culture reference).

If you are against trusted computing, are you personally deciding for or against how threats should be dealt with? Or are you against the more nefarious interpretation of trusted computing? Or are you against delegation of the task?

It's a little bit like "No Child Left Behind." If you are against it, does that mean you want children to be left behind? Then there's the Patriot Act. Are you unpatriotic to withdraw support from it?

These are examples of dialectic concepts that should be separated from each other to dialog about them properly. The video properly identifies the two and presents them as separate concepts. I think we need to look for these separated issues more when we dialog in politics and in general.

Posted via email from Anthony Martin's Weblog

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Selective Service System

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Filed under Political

Check out the new sign on Metro Line 444.

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Richard Dawkins is Misguided

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Filed under History, Political

Believe me when I say I can take any subject and pretty much tie it back to a political argument. It's not hard because the state has ensconced itself into every facet of life.

A friend of mine recommended that I read "The Greatest Show on Earth: The Evidence for Evolution" by Richard Dawkins. It seems that Dawkins' primary beef is that 40% of Americans don't buy evolution. He explains that this is the primary purpose of writing his book. And that's a fine reason indeed. If you have a viewpoint you want to get across, write a book and help people understand.

But that's not why Dawkins is misguided. You have to ask yourself, why is it so important to Dawkins that everyone accept evolution as fact? Well, that's where I get political. Dawkins wants science to be pure. He wants it to be free from pseudo science. And on that, we both agree. But he believes that the only way to do it is to convince the general public to accept evolution. And that's where I disagree. Science shouldn't ever depend on a majority.

If science can only be done by consensus, there will always be conflict. So the solution is to get away from the need for consensus. I'm talking about general consensus, not consensus within science itself.

If you don't get away from consensus, you have to turn to indoctrination. But it shouldn't matter if 50% + 1 of the general public accept one conclusion over another. You can present the general public a mountain of evidence, yet they believe what they want (see OJ trial). Science should be unfettered by general consensus. If the evidence leads a certain place, science should follow that evidence, even if 100% - 1 person believe otherwise.

The problem is that science is funded primarily by government and coercion. Grants come with strings attached. But even if the strings don't affect the outcome of scientific research, a moral problem still exists. The moral problem is that the funds were obtained by violent means.

Government should not be involved in research. It should not do science. There needs to be a separation of science and government, but instead there's a lobby. Research should be funded voluntarily. Political angles always surface. The scientists who do the research that tends to lead to pro-state political outcomes will successfully lobby the funding while the research that leads away from pro-state outcomes will get ignored.

There will always be piles and piles of money waiting to go somewhere. Some of it goes into war. Some of it goes into major economic sectors. But even what's left over for scientific research is huge.

The above is a problem even assuming there is no fraud in scientific research. But imagine what kind of money-pit could happen if research is falsified for a time just to get at that cash-cow. Nobody is surprised when fraud is found in the commodities industry. If "Big Oil" or "Big Iron" is caught with its hand in the cookie-jar, it's almost expected and they get a slap on the wrist. So why would scientific research free from the same scrutiny and suspicion?

There is another gentleman named Dan Dennett who has similar but not identical misguided ideas about education. Dennett is a little less of a prick about it than Dawkins. Where Dawkins would beat people over the head with scientific research, Dennett's approach would be to beat people over the head with all other religions.

Their ideas might be different, but both approaches on dealing with their ideas are identical. They both pine over the democratic implication of ignorance. They both want to take their appeal directly to children, bypassing the parents because they know better.

Dennett claims he wants the parents involved but then asserts that children must be taught all facts in all religion, possibly against the wishes of the parents. I'm sure there are some parents that are totally in favor of this idea. There are some who would rather home school their children, at great expense, to avoid it. Dennett wants to mandate his curriculum policy even for the home schooled.

Both Dawkins and Dennett want to teach their overarching philosophies regardless of what parents value. Check it out, and listen to their recommended tactical political policies:

While Dawkins outright attacks religion, Dennett fanes support for it:

I highly recommend you watch both of the above. It is where education is headed whether you like it or not. The only solution is to abolish government schools. These nutjobs will continue to assert their dastardly policies piggybacking scientific research to get there.

By the way, I'll put anybody on the intelligent design side of the discussion into the "nutjob" category if they are trying to mandate national policies for education too. I know they exist. None of it is valid if the goal forced curriculum. Both sides of the origins debate are trying to leverage public opinion and that's what I object to.

As for the true science itself, I have no objection to it. If you want to research evolution by natural selection, do it. Have fun. It is certainly compelling science. And if you want to teach a curriculum on the same, do it. Offer your curriculum to schools that want to teach it. But don't force it on people by offering it as a national policy. If you have the truth, it should be self-evident. You shouldn't need the violent apparatus of the state to get what you want.

Posted via email from Anthony Martin's Weblog



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