Assyrian relief depicting cruelty to captives.There is a new tool added to the arsenal of weapons used against me. It appears that some form of chemical pollutant taints the air in my apartment on a nightly basis, (usually starting around midnight) that causes severe coughing fits (I reside in an apartment complex near Esteban Park in Phoenix, AZ). This seems to be made possible by my persecutors isolating the apartments that surround mine. In addition, there appear to be few genuine tenants in this apartment complex who are not supporting the Neighborhood Block Watch sponsored “gang stalking” routines in some way.

I was first exposed to these chemicals about a month ago. They appeared to be coming from the dryer exhaust vent of the apartment next to mine. However, the fumes were so strong that I began to cough violently as a result of the irritation. That apartment, although appearing to be occupied, is usually vacant in the evenings. It may well be that my failure to react in a self-destructive way to gang-stalking routines and directed energy weapons torture has prompted the addition of this new tactic.

I never cease to be amazed by the level of hatred that fuels these long-term psychological attacks. In fact, the greater the effort I make to be a reasonable, caring, law-abiding neighbor, the more desperate they become. They are eager to capitalize on any mistake or failing, no matter how small, and take a fiendish delight in cruelty. Here in Phoenix, (Arizona) gang-stalking by neighborhood watch groups is a true growth industry. Nothing seems to unite people of diverse backgrounds more than the opportunity to express hatred for a perceived enemy.

What I observe in my neighbors, reminds me of the community culture in the ancient city of Ninevah, capital of the Assyrian Empire. That city was not only known for its abnormal cruelty, it even boasted of it in song and art.

Here are some Assyrian quotes translated from the many monuments and reliefs they erected in Ninevah celebrating their cruel treatment of captives:

  • “I cut off their heads and formed them into pillars”
  • “Bubo, son of Buba, I flayed in the city of Arbela and I spread his skin upon the city wall”
  • “I flayed all the chief men who had revolted, and I covered the pillar with their skins”
  • “Many within the border of my own land I flayed, and spread their skins upon the walls”
  • “Their corpses I formed into pillars”
  • “From son I cut off their hands and their fingers, and from other I cut off their noses, their ears, and their fingers, of many I put out their eyes”
  • “I made one pillar of the living, and another of heads, I bound their heads to posts round about the city”

Sounds like something out of a horror movie does it not? Yet, this perverse cruelty was the entertainment of ancient Ninevah’s citizens. Violence was an appetite cultivated from childhood in their families and communities. Are we as a modern culture so far removed from ancient Ninevah? Our culture is saturated in violence through entertainment and sports. The vicious mindset that government sponsored directed energy weapons torture and “gang stalking” attracts and cultivates brings an even more insidious danger. It allows its participants to engage in ritual torture while remaining anonymous and without accountability. Abuses occur behind a veneer of respectability. And, like most modern conveniences, it demands little physical effort of its participants. Covert new technologies make remote torture of random citizens as easy as typing on a keypad or connecting with a mob by cellphone.

No doubt, cruel ancient Ninevah would admire our macabre thinking while envying our modern ingenuity . . .

Illustration at beginning of article: This relief represents part of a scene from a marble slab discovered at Khorsabad (Ninevah). The Assyrian king is using a spear to blind one of his many prisoners. In his left hand he holds a cord with a hook attached at the opposite end which are inserted into the prisoners lips. The Assyrians would thrust the point of a dagger or spear into the eye.

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