On Nations, Health, and the Wickedness of Those Who Wish Harm on Other
There is a broader dimension to this abuse that I need to document. It is not just about me. It reveals something about the people doing this and the worldview they hold.
The Colonial Roots of Their Privilege
The people targeting me are not just random individuals. They are products of a history that goes back centuries, a history of colonialism, conquest, and extraction. The United States was built on land stolen from Indigenous peoples, through genocide and forced removal. It was built on the labor of enslaved Africans, whose suffering created wealth that still flows through generations. It was built on systems of exploitation that continue to this day.
Some of these individuals have made it clear that their roots trace back to these colonial histories. They speak with the entitlement of those who have always been on top. They act as if the world belongs to them, as if others exist to serve them, as if their power is natural and deserved.
This is not ancient history. The wealth that funds their technology, the privilege that protects them, the sense of superiority that animates them, all of it comes from systems of oppression that have never been fully dismantled. They are the inheritors of stolen land, stolen labour, stolen futures. And they use that inheritance to terrorize someone who has none of it.
The Hypocrisy of Those Who Claim Superiority
Their hypocrisy is staggering. They speak of justice while perpetrating injustice. They claim moral superiority while engaging in cruelty. They hide behind their privilege while terrorizing someone who has no power to fight back.
They are the descendants of colonizers who believed they had the right to take what was not theirs. They are the inheritors of slaveholders who believed they had the right to own human beings. They are the beneficiaries of systems designed to keep certain people on top and everyone else beneath them.
And what do they do with this inheritance? They use it to stalk, to harass, to terrorize. They use it to project vile fantasies onto an innocent woman. They use it to try to break her mind, to destroy her life, to leave her parents in darkness.
This is what their "superiority" produces. This is what their privilege enables. This is what centuries of unearned power create: cruelty dressed up as justice, violence disguised as virtue, evil pretending to be good.
What I See in the World
When I look at the world, I see patterns. I see places where resources are distributed more equitably, where communities care for each other, where people look out for one another. I see places where the wealth gap is not as extreme, where people are not left behind.
I see nations that are still healing from the wounds of colonialism. I see people who are rebuilding what was taken from them. I see communities that choose empathy over greed, kindness over cruelty, love over hate.
And I see the people who hate that. I see the people who want to destroy what they cannot have. I see the people who would rather burn everything down than see others thrive. I see the inheritors of colonial violence who cannot stand that somewhere else, people are building something better.
The surveillance operators are jealous. They see other nations, other communities, other ways of living—ways that are more empathetic, more community-oriented, more caring. And instead of learning from that, they try to destroy it. They try to induce war. They try to spread curses. They try to sway global rhetoric to destabilize places that are doing better than their own.
This is not patriotism. This is not justice. This is envy weaponized. This is the logic of colonialism turned inward, if we cannot have it, no one can.
Why I Focus on These Specific Individuals
I want to be clear: I am not making a statement about any nation as a whole. I am not saying one country is superior to another. I am observing the behaviour of specific individuals who happen to come from a particular class and background, individuals who are the inheritors of colonial history, who have access to technologies and resources that most people do not, who use those advantages to terrorize others.
They are products of systems that have done immense harm in the world. Colonialism. Genocide. Slavery. Exploitation. Injustice. Hypocrisy. They benefit from these systems. They are protected by these systems. And they use the power these systems give them to target someone who has no such protection.
This is not about where they are from. It is about who they are and what they do. It is about the systems they represent and the privilege they abuse. It is about a history that continues to shape the present, that continues to produce people who believe they have the right to take, to destroy, to harm.
A Reflection on What I See
I am not making claims about any nation being superior. I am observing patterns. I see places where resources are distributed more equitably, where people are healthier, where communities are stronger. I see places where the wealth gap is not as extreme, where people are not left behind.
And I see the people who hate that. I see the people who want to destroy what they cannot have. I see the people who would rather burn everything down than see others thrive.
These are the people targeting me. They are not just targeting one woman. They represent something larger, a sickness that wants to spread, a cruelty that wants to destroy what it cannot control. They are the inheritors of colonial violence, and they are still acting out that violence on anyone they can reach.
Their Obsession with Appearance and Status
Some of the surveillance operators are obsessed with appearance. They make comments about looks, their own, their targets', others'. They threaten to escalate harassment based on perceived attractiveness, adjusting their tactics depending on how they judge someone's appearance.
Not all of them share this fixation with vanity. Some among them remain impartial, or at least attempt to look beyond surface appearances to consider intent, character, and the reality of what is being done. But those who do engage in appearance-based tactics reveal something about themselves: they judge worth by superficial standards. They believe that appearance determines how a person should be treated. They calibrate their cruelty based on how they perceive someone's looks.
This reveals who they are: people who use the most shallow measures to decide how much harm they will do. They have made wishes, spoken or implied, that others would become gross, disgusting, ugly. They have expressed hope that their targets would deteriorate, would become something they could more easily dismiss or degrade.
These wishes will not come to fruition. Their fixation on appearance does not define the people they target. It defines them.
Their superficiality is a reflection of their own emptiness. Their weaponization of vanity reveals the poverty of their character. Their wishes for deterioration and decay are curses that have no power over those who do not accept them. These things are reflections of the people who hold them, not prophecies that will come to pass.
Their fixation on appearance cannot touch those who refuse to be defined by it. A person is not defined by how they are seen. A person is defined by who they are, by intentions, by actions, by faith. These are things that appearance-based cruelty cannot reach.
The wishes they make will return to them. Their cruelty will not succeed against those who stand in truth.
My Rebuke
I rebuke their obsession with appearance and status. I rebuke their vanity weaponized as warfare. I rebuke their jealousy of communities that care for each other, of places where people are not left behind.
I rebuke the systems that produced them, the colonialism, the genocide, the slavery, the exploitation, the injustice, the hypocrisy. I rebuke the privilege they abuse, the power they wield unlawfully, the harm they do to the vulnerable.
I rebuke the colonial logic that says some people are born to rule and others to serve. I rebuke the entitlement that tells them they can take what is not theirs, destroy what they cannot have, harm those who have done them no wrong.
I declare in the name of Jesus Christ:
You will not destroy what you cannot have. You will not curse what you cannot control. Your war will not succeed. Your cruelty will not define the future. The systems that produced you will not protect you. The history that gave you privilege will not save you from accountability.
I bless the communities that care for each other. I bless the places where people are not left behind. I bless those who choose empathy over greed, kindness over cruelty, love over hate. I bless the work of healing, of building, of creating something better than what came before. I bless the nations that are still healing from colonial wounds. I bless the people who are rebuilding what was taken from them.
In the name of Jesus Christ, my Lord and Saviour, amen.
References & Notes
On Colonial History of the United States
The United States was founded on land stolen from Indigenous peoples through centuries of genocide, forced removal, and broken treaties. The economic foundation of the nation was built on the labour of enslaved Africans, whose suffering created wealth that still flows through generations. Systems of racial hierarchy, land theft, and exploitation were codified into law and continue to shape American society today. These are not ancient grievances, they are ongoing injustices that have never been fully addressed.
The individuals targeting me are inheritors of this history. Some have made it clear that their roots trace back to colonial settlers. They speak with the entitlement of those who have always been on top. They act as if the world belongs to them. This is not a coincidence. It is the logic of colonialism, the belief that some people are born to rule and others to serve, still operating in the present.
On Privilege and Accountability
Privilege that comes from historical injustice is not something to be defended. It is something to be examined, confronted, and dismantled. The people targeting me use their privilege to harm others. They believe their position protects them from accountability. It does not. No amount of wealth, technology, or inherited power can shield anyone from the truth of what they have done.
Observations on Global Health and Inequity
The United States has one of the highest wealth gaps among developed nations, with the top 1% owning a disproportionate share of national wealth.
Many nations have stronger social safety nets, better public health outcomes, and higher levels of social trust.
Research shows that societies with lower inequality have better health outcomes, higher life expectancy, and stronger community bonds (Wilkinson & Pickett, 2009; The Spirit Level).
Biblical References
Proverbs 14:34 "Righteousness exalts a nation, but sin is a disgrace to any people."
Micah 4:3-4 "They will beat their swords into plowshares and their spears into pruning hooks. Nation will not take up sword against nation, nor will they train for war anymore. Everyone will sit under their own vine and under their own fig tree, and no one will make them afraid."
Isaiah 54:17 "No weapon that is formed against you will succeed."
Psalm 27:1 "The Lord is my light and my salvation; whom shall I fear?"
Amos 5:24 "Let justice roll down like waters, and righteousness like an ever-flowing stream."
James 2:1-4 "My brothers and sisters, do not hold your faith in our glorious Lord Jesus Christ with an attitude of personal favoritism. For if a man comes into your assembly with a gold ring and dressed in fine clothes, and a poor man also comes in dressed in dirty clothes, and you pay special attention to the one who is wearing the fine clothes... have you not made distinctions among yourselves, and become judges with evil motives?"
Micah 6:8 "He has told you, O man, what is good; and what does the Lord require of you but to do justice, to love kindness, and to walk humbly with your God?"
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