On being mobbed

The account of an ongoing bid to harass a legal tenant out of her Seattle neighborhood


Pictures from a mobbing (part 6)

Months back, I mentioned the two window vents at the lowlife house about eight feet from the north side of the Albany house and the noxious matter that was clearly being expelled from at least the upper one. In my last blog, I described the extension cord, plugged into an exterior outlet amid an arrangement of metal objects in the back yard of the lowlife house, and tucked in close to the lowlife side of the fence as it runs out to the front of that house to a vintage car that rests in the driveway.

The upper-story window of the lowlife house that appears to vent highly noxious matter

This is a closely cropped phone image of the upper window, taken through radio-frequency blocking film. You can see there is no piping to guide whatever is being exhausted. Instead, the matter appears to be propelled right at the pane of this window of the living room. Most radio-frequency comes into our homes through glass. Air-conditioners apparently emit high volumes of EMFs, even when they operate normally and are not modified to radiate or otherwise sicken the neighbors. The electric meter for this house is probably within ten feet, on the diagonal toward the electric service drop.

The north side of the house has been the location of the electrical and communications infrastructure, including the coaxial-based Comcast service I terminated. One of the five or more access points maliciously deployed alongside and into this house was identified as an all-in-one printer and was positioned near the electric meter and near one of two Comcast set-top boxes that used to be in the house. If you’d like to see heat maps, search this site for “heat map” and you should be able to find several blogs that show how I’ve documented these rogue access points. Today I’ve found that positioning a powerful fan interior, to face the glass pane of the window opposite the lowlife house, appears to disturb and quell the sound waves. I have a few other experiments in mind for the fan.

The lower-story window vent of the lowlife house

This image was shot at an angle towards the back of the lowlife house, also through the window film, and is closely cropped. You can see that the piping directs whatever matter might be expelled from the vent downward. That window is probably within about a foot off the walkway on that side of the fence, where the extension cord is run from front to back. It’s that extension cord that I’ve suspected might be a longwire or ground-plane antenna. Previously, when I knew a bit less than the little I know about antennas, I considered it might be in use as a radiator.

Another thing I didn’t mention in the last post is the possibility of interference from updated, efficient street lighting into the services hosted at the utility pole. One hopes tests are conducted to check for such things before new lighting is installed. As I was trying to get the last post out, I ran across the term “RF-quiet” in reference to light bulbs, something to think about as we try to increase energy efficiency and live green.



2 responses to “Pictures from a mobbing (part 6)”

  1. […] blog entry Pictures from a mobbing (part 6) shows how debris from an apparent air-conditioning system used to be emitted from the window […]

  2. […] A few weeks back I purchased one drum fan, then two, and began using them along the infrastructure side of the Albany house. I let them have periods of rest by changing the fan speed, alternating between them during times when the audible harassment tended to be worse in one area, and in hopes of listening to NPR with less harassment by signal diversion, or as smoke and whatever lowlife stench moved from one location to another. The technique provides good amelioration, keeping most mobbing sound as well as lowlife-channeled and drafted smoke and other substances out of the house. This last week, I’ve tried the use of fans, including a drum fan, in a similar manner at the Seattle house. In both places, the exterior fans improve the amelioration from keeping doors and windows open as much as possible given the constraints of weather and security. At both houses the fans are used along the infrastructure side of the house and the side opposite–this ends up being the north and south sides of each house. At the Seattle house, the starting point on the infrastructure side of the house is positioned opposite an exhaust duct on the south mobbing house that was lifted to be squarely centered on the half-light of my kitchen window at or near the start of the mobbing. This parallels the configuration of one of what appear to be the lowlife portable air-conditioning systems whose exhaust is channeled directly onto a living room window at the Albany house, along a stretch of some seven access points traversing the infrastructure on the north side of the house. See Pictures from a mobbing (part 6). […]

the lay of the land

Air conditioners are the entry point to the grid, and a postcard from Seattle’s South Cedar Park

Lighting and mobbers’ living-off-the-land exploits

Mobbing by WiFi range extender

The mobbers’ “World Wireless System” and hate culture in Albany, California (part 1)

The mobbers’ “World Wireless System” and hate culture in Albany, California (part 2)

The mobbers’ “World Wireless System” and hate culture in Albany, California (part 3)

Infrastructure crimes: Mobbing with interference; extraction by heat (part 3)

Mobbing, infrasound and leaky feeders (part 2)

Mobbing, infrasound and leaky feeders (part 1)

Smart meters, carrier current transmission and the mobbers’ radio (part 1)

Stop mobbing crimes with data: Airtool for wireless capture

Stop mobbing crimes with data: Visualize nearby networks with NetSpot

Is this a radio? Look what the mobbers made!

Pictures from a mobbing (part 2)

Pictures from a mobbing (part 1)

Gang-stalking: Invest in real estate! No money down! (part 2)

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