Surveillance Operators Are Treating Lives Like a Game – Or at Least That's What They Intentionally Falsely Try to Make Me Perceive
1. They See Your Life as a Game (Or Try to Make You Think That Way)
From what I have experienced, the operators watching me do not see me as a real person with rights. They see my daily life as a game. They have said — directly or by implication — that they want to make it enjoyable for themselves.
This is not just wrong. It is a deliberate violation.
They intentionally and falsely try to make me perceive life as a game. This is the opposite of a godly, healthy mind and perception in today's day and age. A healthy mind sees life as meaningful, as an opportunity to love God and others, not as something to be won or lost like a game.
2. They Try to Influence Victims in Harmful Ways
One of the most hidden parts of this operation: they are not just trying to destroy one person. They are trying to condition victims in harmful ways, hoping that the victim might eventually be turned into someone who causes harm.
- Why? Because if a conditioned victim later does something wrong, the operators can say "see? we were right."
- What happens to many targets? Some victims end their own lives. From where I stand, that appears to be an intended outcome. If you cannot testify, they can claim your death was proof you were guilty all along.
I live as lawfully as I possibly can — no crimes, no hidden life, just trying to survive. Yet they accuse me of being the problem. It is deliberate reversal.
3. They Try to Control Your Body Without Permission
I say this in good faith: my body is not connected to them. My well-being is mine alone. But they have technology designed to influence stress responses and fear reactions. They try to make my body react to things I would never want. Then they watch my reaction like observers watching a subject.
The violation happens the moment they try. Even if I resist, I still have to experience the attempt. That alone is distressing.
The impossible situation: They provoke me constantly. I must keep a neutral face in public — no visible distress, no anger. If I show emotion, they say "see? unstable." If I show nothing, they say "see? hiding something." There is no winning.
4. They Accuse You of Being What They Are
This is called narrative inversion — a simple trick: they accuse the victim of doing exactly what they do. Here is how it looks:
| What the operators do | What they accuse me of |
|---|---|
| Watch me in private moments for their own purposes | Being secretive or untrustworthy |
| Try to manipulate my natural responses | Being a harmful person |
| Do troubling things to me remotely | Being complicit or enjoying the abuse |
| Torment me nonstop for years | Being unstable or paranoid |
They want to make you feel like a criminal while you are actually living as a decent, lawful person. And they hope one day your story will be twisted to make you look like the bad person.
5. How Some Operators Behave
Based on what I have witnessed, some operators do not act professionally. They speak harshly to targets. They engage in harmful practices — things that are intentionally disturbing. They hide behind their systems.
At the same time, many of them claim Christian beliefs. They condemn me based on their reading of Scripture. They say I am evil. But they themselves are doing harmful things — voyeurism, psychological torment, trying to corrupt people. And yet they still believe God will forgive them. They see life as a game where there are winners (them) and losers (us), both in this life and the afterlife.
I do not claim to be the final judge. But I hope that one day, these operators will be held accountable for what they have done — not for their claimed righteousness.
6. Summary of What Is Wrong Here
- No consent: Nobody agreed to be monitored or physically manipulated.
- No good reason: There is no crime that justifies constant torment.
- They seem to enjoy it: Some operators admit they make it "enjoyable" for themselves. That is troubling.
- They lie about victims: They call me the harmful one — when they are the ones causing harm.
- They try to condition victims: Attempting to manipulate people toward harmful responses is itself wrong.
- Some victims die by suicide: Some operators appear to see this as an acceptable outcome.
- Religious hypocrisy: They use the Bible to condemn others while doing harmful things and assuming they will be forgiven.
7. Final Statement for the Record
I am writing this so no one can later twist the story. I am not a harmful person. I am not untrustworthy. I am not complicit. I am a victim of surveillance operators who use technology to try to manipulate my natural responses. They try to condition me and others in harmful ways. Some of them appear to want us broken or worse.
I continue to live lawfully. I continue to hope for justice. I continue to follow Jesus Christ — not the version some operators claim, but the real one who said "get away from me, you evildoers."
The concern I feel is appropriate. It is the right response to wrongdoing. And I refuse to let them make me look like the guilty one.
Let the record show: The wrongdoing belongs to the operators. Not the target.
I am letting people know the truth. They will not control this narrative.
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