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Thursday, January 9, 2014

According to the controlled media, the worst threat Americans face as far as privacy invasion is concerned, is the tapping of their cell phones. Thank you Mr. Snowden! You have them duly alarmed. What if they knew the thoughts inside their skulls could potentially not only be monitored, but actually controlled--including their so-called free speech? This massive coverup must be viewed with some humor by insiders.
Let's call the public blissfully ignorant. The code of secrecy about these facts is partly maintained by assassination/harassment squads, who can act anonymously and untraceably from a distance, against the more dangerous whistleblowers who insist on unveiling dangerous truths. Also, many of the experimental targets who were approached were mentally handicapped to the extent that they posed no threat even if they did put up any kind of resistance or fuss--easily manipulated by the scientific elite who had access to the technology. The bullying of the latter constituted a very cruel holocaust. The common man really didn't have much defense either, as far as that goes. Usually fairly easily dismissed as delusional if he'd had an encounter and tried to complain.

One of the more recent cases (casualties) to surface in the news (only to be ridiculed by most) was that of Aaron Alexis, who shot up 12 people in a Navy yard with a weapon he had facetiously branded as "My ELF" before authorities were able to gun him down, as detailed in this September 17, 2013, ABC news report:
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By 
COLLEEN CURRYMore From Colleen »
Colleen Curry
Reporter
 via WORLD NEWS

Chilling details in a police report made public today suggest that Navy Yard shooter Aaron Alexis may have been losing touch with reality just weeks before he went on a shooting rampage in Washington, D.C.
Alexis called police in Newport, R.I., on Aug. 7 after he switched hotels three times because he heard voices in the walls and ceilings talking to him, trying to keep him awake, and he wanted to file a harassment report, according to police documents.
Alexis told police that he heard voices that he feared were "sending vibrations through his body" and were out to harm him, noting that he had gotten into an argument on a plane to Rhode Island and he was convinced the person he argued with had sent three people to follow him.
Alexis "stated that the individuals are using 'some sort of microwave machine' to send vibrations through the ceiling, penetrating his body so he cannot fall asleep," officers wrote in the police report.
Police questioned Alexis about whether he had any prior mental issues or episodes and any family history of mental illness, but Alexis said he did not. They then notified the Navy police and faxed a copy of the report to the Navy about Alexis's complaints.
The episode showed a disturbed Alexis battling mental issues just weeks before he went to the Navy Yard in Washington, D.C., and opened fire on workers there, killing 12 individuals Monday morning.
Alexis, 34, was killed when police rushed to the scene and exchanged gunfire with him.
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Reminds me a little of the early days of my own victimization. Days after it began I moved out of my house into a cheap hotel in Cleveland hoping to escape torments. I consumed a whole bottle of vodka, hoping the experience would go away. That was before my aborted attempt to flee to New York....  Testosterone driven males are apt to react with violence if this sort of thing is pulled on them, often with devastating consequences.