Anthony Martin’s Weblog

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Last Night's Suspicionless Checkpoint

Last night, I observed a suspicionless checkpoint on Artesia going eastbound toward Van Ness.  All eastbound traffic was being stopped.  A lot of cars were being towed.

I contacted Torrance Police Department to inquire as to why these activities were not announced ahead of time.  The initial response from Lieutenant Stephen D’anjou (via Blackberry) was that the press release was sent out last week.

I believe Lieutenant D’anjou is mistaken.  I checked the Torrance PD web site and no such press release was listed on their press release page.  Maybe a press release was sent out but just not posted on the web page.  The local paper would have gotten a copy if that's the case.

But this is not the case from what I can tell.  Daily Breeze (the local newspaper in Torrance) has announcements for other such activity in the past, but not the one regarding last night.  Was it announced only in hard copies of the newspaper?  Is this an Internet blackout?

Yet indeed, here is a view of the actual suspicionless checkpoint from the corner of Artesia and Van Ness, looking back to the west:

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This is a shot of the parking lot next to the activity:

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Torrance Police Department believes the "DUI" checkpoint is a proven effective method for increased awareness of the dangers of impaired driving.

In the past, by publicizing these enforcement and education efforts, Torrance Police Department believes motorists can be deterred from drinking and driving.

Typically, funding for these kinds of operations is provided by a grant from the California Office of Traffic Safety through the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration.

But last night, they broke from their previous motivation and imposed the suspicionless checkpoint without even prior notice.

Whatever your belief of the effectiveness of these suspicionless checkpoint, know this.  It is a violation of the 4th Amendment of the US Constitution to demand evidence of a crime without probable cause.  The suspicionless checkpoint, by definition, lacks probable cause.

It is much easier to introduce an intrusive measure by watering down the most intrusive aspects.  It is harder to be against suspicionless checkpoints when they are announced ahead of time.  But is easy to just stop announcing them once they become commonplace.

We are no longer on our way to a police state.  We live in a police state now.  It's only going to get worse.

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Filed under  //   Liberty   Local   Memory Hole   Resistance   Rule of Law   Torrance   Video  

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Awake At 5 AM

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"ONE SEVEN FOUR FIVE ZERO NUMBER TWENTY-FIVE OPEN UP ... ONE SEVEN FOUR FIVE ZERO NUMBER TWENTY-FIVE OPEN UP OR YOU MAY BE SHOT!"

Those are the words we woke up to this morning at around 5:00.  The sheriff, along with Torrance PD, were raiding the apartment next door to ours.  There were also several non-uniformed officers involved in the raid.

"Don't stand there, you might be in the cross fire."

That was probably more scary than the original outburst.  We were not sure who was being addressed, but it seemed like one officer was talking to another in the hallway, not the occupants of any apartments.

I observed a few sheriffs in body armor and military style helmet, one carrying a battering ram.  There were many local police and two official vehicles in our driveway, blocking five or six cars.  At some point, I overheard the officers explain to one another that they thought the accused person threw something out the window.  So they proceeded to shine spotlights into our children's room while an occupant of the raided apartment told them if they were hot or cold.  I also observed an officer standing on the fence, looking into the yard of the house directly behind the raid.

Then, a neighbor asked what was going on; he was conversing with the officers with spotlights out his window.  The officer asked my neighbor if they needed to get a warrant for him too.  The neighbor politely replied, "No thanks."

"Well that was anti-climactic."

Those are the words of a classic adrenaline junkie.

By the time I was ready to go to work. one of our neighbors was in custody, being driven away in a black, unmarked official vehicle.  Have a nice day!

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Filed under  //   Home Front   Terrifying   Video  

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Hannah Meets Minnie Mouse

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Filed under  //   DLR   Video  

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Titus Play-by-play

I've had some time to reflect on the events right before and to the birth of Titus.  We are safe and sound at home as a family.  Grandpa Jerry dropped off the kids the day after we got home and we're all together again in our tiny apartment.

We appreciate all of the well-wishes and congratulations from everyone.  It took so long to get to this point, yet Titus was really only two days "late."  His due-date was the 8th, and he ended up being born on the 10th.

A bit of the story can be seen on my Facebook account as it happened and as I would snap pictures and upload them.  But that really doesn't capture the story completely.

T-06:09: Book Store - Just a few hours before Titus arrived, Karen and I were actually on a date.  Aunt Tammy was watching the kids and we went to Souplantation.  After that, we went to the book store and even met with a friend there.

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T-05:30: Home - We arrived home to find the kids were asleep in bed thanks to Aunt Tammy.  Karen complained of "gas" pain, which made Tammy and me suspicious.  But there were false alarms before, so we treated this the same.

T-04:10: First Stage Labor - We went to bed and Karen continued to report pain every 10 minutes.  I got dressed.  Twenty minutes later, I called Grandpa Jerry, who was our designated baby-sitter for the big event.  Jerry arrived quickly after that.  We were still trying to figure out if it was time to go to the hospital.  See, we didn't want to spend hours there and we didn't want them to pressure us with any unnecessary procedures before we were ready.  Then the contractions came more quickly, so we decided just to go.

T-01:10: Hospital Arrival - We arrived at the hospital at 1:20 AM.  It took a moment to locate L&D department on the 3rd floor.  They were closed up and no one was at the front desk.  We found the intercom and they let us in.  I had to leave Karen to move the van from patient arrival to the parking lot.

I got back from moving the van and joined Grandma Sue, Aunt Tammy, and Uncle Gilbert.  Karen was already in a hospital gown.  I briefly stepped out to tell Gilbert we might be a while.  Little did I know Karen was "complete, complete."  This means dilation was complete and effacement was complete.  The doctor was 30 minutes away, so we got the "on-call" doctor.

T-00:18: Second Stage Labor - Karen answered their questions and signed their papers.  So much for second stage labor.



T00:00: Delivery -
Titus Joseph Martin arrived at 2:13 AM on May 10th, 2009 (Mother's Day), weighing in at 10 pounds, length of 21 inches.

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After he arrived, got cleaned up, and Karen was patched up a bit (she sustained far less injury than with Benjamin's delivery, even though Titus was about 7 ounces heavier), we were moved from L&D to our room at around 4:30 AM.

There were several visitors on Mother's Day including Gramps and Nana.

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They were already scheduled to volunteer at Torrance Memorial that day, so they arrived early and too me to breakfast.

Later that day, Hannah and Benjamin arrived with Grandpa Jerry.  Jerry had some things to take of, so all the kids got to hang out for a while.




We stayed one night and left after diner on the 11th.  The hospital is not a place to rest, so we were all too glad to get out of there.  They did a number of tests and picked on on the new kid for various reasons (due to his size and other factors) and they all came back negative.

Arrival at home was around 10:30 PM.  Benjamin and Hannah were still with Grandpa Jerry, so we had a peaceful night and morning.  Titus was very quiet ... almost too quiet.  But Karen assured me he'll get more vocal very soon.

Since we got home early, we were in uncharted territory.  We never had such a peaceful time so soon after the birth of either Benjamin or Hannah.  I highly recommend going home early if it's safe to do so.  And I highly recommend ditching the kids of possible, even if for 24 hours.

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Filed under  //   Home Front   Local   Photo   Torrance   Video  

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iPhone/iPod touch and Benjamin

Benjamin loves iPhone/iPod touch.  No, I don't think Apple had autistics in mind when they designed them.  But that's just it.  Apple designed it so intuitively, practically anyone can fiddle with it and figure it out without instruction.

One morning, after my shower, I found him in his room, playing with his mom's iPod touch.  He swiped it out of our room, turned it on, unlocked it, navigated through the home screen, found his favorite applications, and launched it (currently either Banner and Peanut Butter Jelly Time).  He probably did this multiple times on this morning because he likes the transition between the home screen and the app when it's launched.  But we still have to supervise him.  It might actually make sense to set up a pass key to discourage him from swiping it.  Then again, that might backfire.

Here he is using my iPhone:



So far, there are only two things I have to really watch him on.  First, he still likes to put things in his mouth, especially objects he really likes.  This hasn't happened yet, that I'm aware of.  Second, he tends to accidentally get the home screen into "uninstall/move" mode.  The main reason this happens is because sometimes he doesn't realize his other fingers are touching the icons.  Touching the icons on the home screen for more than a couple seconds causes it to switch into this mode.  When this happens, all the icons shake and non-Apple apps can be removed by tapping the X.  He hasn't managed to uninstall anything yet.

There is a feature in the Settings that allows Restrictions on various features.  It'd be nice if "uninstall" was one of the listed restrictions, but it's not as of OS version 2.2.1.

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Filed under  //   Apple   Autism   Gadgets   Home Front   Mobile   Video  

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Alphabet Sounds

One of Benjamin's teachers recommended getting some pictures for him to trace to help get him interested in coloring.  Part of the problem is he isn't making the connection with the pictures we want him to color.  They aren't familiar and he doesn't care to engage.

He really loves a video Karen found on YouTube that has a picture for each letter of the alphabet.  The song is popular at Benjamin's various schools, "Alphabet Sounds" sung by Barbra Miline.  The video version is excellent, only for one minor thing: they use lower case letters.  This does not detract from Benjamin's extreme interest in the video.  But Benjamin does observe the letters and confused the upper case "I" with the lower case "l" when he sees the "Lion" slide.  To me, the fact that he confused them is great.  It means he is connecting the letters to the image.  Wonderful progress.

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Source: YouTube

His teacher recommended that I extract the pictures from the video with CMD-Shift-F4 (the Mac OS X way) and dump them into a photo so I could print them.  I thought that was such a good idea, I did that when I got home after the meeting with her.  For speed, I used CMD-Shift-F4, followed by <space>, followed by clicking on the Quicktime window.  Then, to get rid of the Quicktime app border and isolate just the image, I used GIMP to use the magic lasso to select just the actual image, then I used "Crop to Selection."  This resulted in a perfect crop of the images.

                                                   
Click here to download:
Alphabet_Soundstag_Home_Front_.zip (4933 KB)

Learn more ...

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Filed under  //   Autism   Home Front   Video  

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Senator Wright argues for the budget package

Watch this mental patient:



Senator Wright, STOP SPENDING.  You are not a moderate.  You are just a mental patient and you're off your meds.  Your sob stories do not alter the reality that all economies are contracting.  All economies are shrinking and you want to expand $47 billion more?  Actually, you want to spend $100 billion more because that's how you roll.

On top of that, you invoke the name of Jesus to vote for this politically centered budget?  That's pure blasphemy, Senator Wright!

Jesus would not recommend that we rely upon the government take care of people.  If people are suffering, it is the responsibility of the person, family, neighbor, and the local community who should be there, not a centralized bloated bureaucracy with mental issues.

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Filed under  //   California   Economic   Faith   Local   Political   Video  

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TEDTalks - The art of baking bread - Peter Reinhart (2008)

Check out this episode of TEDTalks at The art of baking bread - Peter Reinhart (2008).
 

 
Peter really takes bread seriously.
 
Sent from my iPhone

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Filed under  //   Faith   History   How To   Presentation   Video  

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Mark Driscoll's Valentine Interview on CNN

There was an interview on CNN between Darryl Lynn "D.L." Hughley and Mark Driscoll.  Here's a frame I snapped right after Mark told a joke:



And here's a link to the interview:

http://theresurgence.com/pastor_mark_driscoll_on_cnn

Learn more ...

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Filed under  //   Christology   Faith   Ministry   Reformed   Video  

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The Dollar is Doomed

I really can't add anything witty or insightful to what I'm about to show you (as if I ever).  But I think the video below shows exactly where we are.  Where we're going is another matter.  Please turn on the sound, it helps set the mood.


Source: The Dollar is Doomed

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Source: Fed Reserve Fails to Reflate the US Banking System

Additional context: Ben Bernanke's Wild Ride (and Ours)

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Filed under  //   Economic   History   Memory Hole   Political   Spooky   Video  

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