25 May, 2011

Can citizens report suspicious activities of strange groups (gang stalkers)?

I found a good article to share about the people capable of engaged in gang stalking. What if these people engaged in the surveillance turned into bullies and harassers? Because they are the one working with the authorities, the victim cannot get a help. The one probably will be treated as a suspect of something. In such case, I think the victim can share the information of the group or the people who are harassing. If the one is not doing anything wrong, the one does not have problem exposing what they are doing. If they cause psychological injury, the victim should be capable to share their victimization from the strange group as the possibility of the human right violation. In my case, I got DOD people stalking me. Dr. Wiggsy Sivertsen at SJSU tried to claim it as a imagination, but the truth is the school psychiatrists can help claiming the victim as mentally ill - the result a human experiment for the DOD. They are probably creating the victims to be either suspect of something with their snitch jacket method or sending them for the latest human experiment in the psychiatric wards. The method is nothing new; COINTELPRO was done around the time MKULTRA was studied.

The victims should have right for exposing what is going on. We can laugh at the people trying to set up things to make the victim looks like a criminal or something suspicious. If they violate my human right first, I can share the information with my free speech. These groups need some suspicious people in order to get funds and keep their organization going. The victims can help them stop harassing innocent people with their hope of turning them into terrorists/criminals by sharing their ridiculous activities like high school kids bullying the weak.

We've looked before at suspicious activity reports (SAR database) and fusion centers that keep info on supposedly "suspicious" people, keeping watchlists that can be accessed by local law enforcement and other government agencies. Domestic surveillance seems out of control and ACLU's Policy Counsel on National Security, Immigration and Privacy, Mike German, has said as much: "The most disturbing thing we've uncovered is the scope of domestic intelligence activities taking place today. Domestic spying is now being done by a host of federal agencies (FBI, DOD, DHS, DNI) as well as state and local law enforcement and even private companies. Too often this spying targets political activity and religious practices. We've documented intelligence activities targeting or obstructing First Amendment-protected activity in 33 states and DC."
(http://www.networkworld.com/community/blog/ridiculous-dhs-list-you-might-be-domestic-ter)

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