[Note: March 2, 2023 — In another attempt to put this together in a way that gets people in this horrible situation help, it might be that mobbers have found that boosting signal by saturating victim environments with EMFs, discarded matter from power charging equipment, signal extenders and hotspots, allows harassing sound, particulate, and other debris from systems and flows with proximity or those wired for delivery to be carried into the victim house by currents and flows including charged galvanized piping and low-voltage electrical systems that expose low-voltage targets or are not grounded to current codes. As I understand it, the very fact of increased demand and supply that comes with modern appliances and electrical services means that older homes are likely to lack appropriate grounding, whether or not the knob-and-tube wiring remains. In such a scenario, a power generator becomes another booster and boosting is achieved by elevating low current power and signal. This is just a suggestion of what I think might be taking place. I am not a radio-frequency or antenna engineer. But the ease with which criminals can sabotage household systems will not be cured until we involve ethical professionals with their expertise in looking at these vulnerabilities.] [Note 05/07/23: AI should be useful to analyze the anomalous conditions and patterns of mobbing crimes. The difficulty would likely be in capturing and representing some kinds of data.]
As noted in another post or two on On being mobbed, someone once wrote me and told me that mobbers charge over WiFi signal extenders that cross victim circuits. It was an explanation I discounted, but one that has come to make increasing sense.
I’ve talked about how mobbers seem to make use of knob-and-tube electrical systems that cannot be effectively grounded. Many older houses still have some knob-and-tube wiring. Mobbers seem to use low voltage and IoT devices to excite reactions over your circuits that can cause harm to you and your appliances and devices, reactions that might be considered dangerous.
So far as I can see, the Albany mobbers combine wireless charging processes, like those used to charge Tesla vehicles, with signal extenders and hotspots, and add to these devices that use interfering protocols or have interfering potential, like video cameras or lights that utilize exposed electrodes.
One such device is what looks like the LED torch lights used by the Albany CrossFit neighbor. These flickering lights, which may be Bluetooth-enabled, could be deployed to interact with what looks like another neighbor’s exterior EMF-spewing air-conditioning system or generator along with some recently positioned IoT manufactured for security that keeps a corridor with line-of-sight access from that air-conditioner/generator and the bathroom window of this house lit much of the night. An illuminated tube vents the unit in this direction. The air-conditioning system or generator may be capable of producing a WiFi access point. The LED torch lights and the air-conditioning system appear to create a noxious effect based on their intersection and interaction with two wireless car chargers that may be allowed to remain on to add to the effect. Escaping the effect has become much more difficult in the past few weeks. Manufacturers might not be creating devices that routinely charge over extenders, but the mobbers have found a way.
In the past I associated the interference that seemed to be pelted at me by my monitor with high-speed interfering video cameras during such attacks. Tonight and last night, the flickering LED lights, coupled with some kind of smoke and then the kind of debris and interactions discussed above were apparent. The new neighbors who came to the door a few months back and complained that our “flowers” were on their property installed a charging station for their Tesla a few weeks back and every few days jam the car horizontally into their driveway with the trunk angled at this house for a prolonged period of time. The pollutants coming into the house escalated these last weeks as I published blog entries on the pitfalls of senior housing in Albany and the possibility of some parents finding home buying opportunities in the Albany School District through mobbing long-time home owners here out.
I move multiple times, even during the course of one day, from room to room, trying to find the location in the house most sheltered from the aggressions of the mobber or attack of the moment. I turn off Bluetooth, if it is on. I disconnect any and all charging devices. I pull the plug on the external monitor. I look to see if there are manufacturers’ warnings on the flickering LED lights sold on Amazon.com. I read an article by a doctor warning of the damage LEDs can inflict on the eyes. I run an Airtool capture on the 802.11 traffic, and maybe another to pick up Ethernet frames. If it’s late enough, I take the ice packs out of the freezer and put them into the refrigerator and turn off the thermostat to still the evaporator fans. If it’s not, I strategically open or close windows. I position fans to blow it out, and air purifiers to suck it in. I turn off the lights–the lights are always on the knob-and-tube, the electrician said. I still the water in the pipes. I ready the power stores and calculate how soon I can turn off the mains panel in the basement.
I check to see how many people read this blog today, and I wonder how long it will take before someone with more expertise than I can offer explains the dangers of the hacks that these Jekyll-and-Hyde criminals use to harm their unsuspecting neighbors from trusted positions. How long before the mobbing racket is investigated and the rings of those who practice it and profit from it are exposed and prosecuted? How long before we understand the police won’t stop this and before the intercession of some agency that will? I wonder what happened to my mother here in this house, before she told me that something was “bothering” her and that she had decided to move.
All this as I hope that the cutting sensation in my eyes will pass, that the burning sensation in my lungs will fade. All this as it continues–the smoke that swells the throat, the LEDs that flicker with mobbing prattle, the seedy air-conditioners and EMF-laden debris, the dirty-electricity hotspots, IoT devices, and charging across the circuits of others, the neighborhood campaigns of terror to force women from their homes.
