What is gang stalking? Where a bully involves the ongoing pattern - TopicsExpress



          

What is gang stalking? Where a bully involves the ongoing pattern of mental or physical abuse of another person, gang stalking involves a coordinated activity by a group of like-minded people on an individual target. The best way to describe what gang stalking is involves giving examples that, when put together, show a pattern of psychological attack and harassment from multiple points. These would include: Attacks and harassment happening sporadically or daily over a number of days. Traffic harassment in the form of being obviously followed, cut-off or forced to brake hard. Someone obviously watching a person’s activities from a distance. Repeat passing of previously-unseen cars going by a person’s house. A sense of being followed but, when examined, no one seems to be the obvious follower. Finding garbage or trash repeatedly thrown on one’s property. Things moved around inside a personal space, office or even a home. The results or organized gang stalking are predictable and expected. A person experiencing these kinds of issues combined or consecutively will begin to have an increasing feeling of anxiety and fear. That will lead to what a rationale person would describe as paranoia, but it seems to be based in real incidents and instances that only the person is experiencing. It’s rare that a third party witness also sees the behavior causing the problem. Unfortunately, gang stalking is not an imagined condition. It has happened and does happen with frequency for a variety of reasons. The activity goes by a number of names as well, including predatory gang stalking, vigilante stalking, and group stalking. Victims of gang stalking often share specific characteristics that are not similar to other victims. It is frequently the case that the gang stalking is started because the victim has upset the common sense of a group, right or wrong. The activity then begins to either punish the victim or force compliance in some issue. The reasons vary and can include the following: The victim represents some kind of perceived threat to a group or a cause. The target often has no idea who all the group members are. The gang members frequently don’t know the victim personally, except maybe one or two of them, nor do they know why the victim has been targeted. The stalking is often indirect and subtle rather than overt and direct. Some of the most annoying tactics used by gang stalking groups often involve behaviors that have no close or visible contact at all. These can include communications that involve some simple piece of information that is personal. It doesn’t take much; the information just has to be personal enough to irritate the target. This can include the names of family and pets, the time of typical daily schedules, places where family work or go to school, description characteristics, or simply sending messages that the target is being watched with enough detail to confirm the surveillance is indeed occurring. These activities alone can be enough to get under most people’s skins and get them highly irritated if not outright angry. More general tactics are those that have been around for decades, usually including some kind of minor vandalism that creates an annoying mess to clean up or disturbance to home life. Gang Stalking activities can include crank phone calls, graffiti on a person’s property, trash being thrown everywhere on a front lawn, damage to a car, and a large amount of noise in the street at night to wake a person up. What makes gang stalking really stand out from other abusive behavior is the fact that the activity continues for a long period of time. There doesn’t seem to be a letting up, which is a result of a coordinated long-term attack by a group’s members. The harassment often increases or matures as well as the group members often believe their anonymity protects them from being caught. The goals of gang stalking are far more than just annoyance, however. They often include: Harassing a victim to the point of psychological fear or even terror. Convincing everyone else in the community, or at least the target’s peers, that the person is just imagining a gang stalking hoax and is starting to go crazy and paranoid. Working to isolate the victim so that he can’t rely on anyone for any help. Alienate the victim from family and friends, which makes the ongoing psychological harm easier and easier to inflict. Gang stalking really took a rise after the Internet became widely available in the 1990s with numerous gang stalking stories. The ability to communicate quickly with a group using means that covered their identity made it possible for groups to coordinate over times and distances without easily being identified and caught. This also led to initial gang stalking paranoia. Group dynamics are the core of a successful gang stalking, so the members are also the weakest link. As long as all the members support the plan, follow their roles, and stay hidden from the target, then it will be near impossible for a target to stop the activity without laying some kind of a trap to expose the members. These dynamics provide the fabric for how the group operates when continuing to maintain a target’s harassment. They also serve as a source of interaction and support for the members, allowing them to find a commonality in their actions and justification for a greater cause; they reinforce each other to keep going and maintain the stalking en masse. Gang stalking has its weaknesses, however. First off it relies on the assumption that the target will grow demoralized and will stay that way, growing progressively weaker and paranoid under the chronic harassment. Second, the target will not be able to produce or find any viable evidence proving that gang stalking is occurring, thereby isolating him to peers. Third, there won’t be any records available to show a conspiracy actually occurred between suspected persons. Finally, because everything is ambiguous, the target won’t be able to confront anybody as a participant, to then strike back. Again, all of these assumptions are based on the idea that the target is powerless to hit back. The dynamic starts to fall apart, however, where and when a target doesn’t follow these rules. For those looking to effectively defend themselves from gang stalking activities, information and situational awareness are two tools anyone can become good at collecting. When the products of these tools are put together over time, they begin to produce a niche into the gang stalking group’s system that can be taken advantage of. These efforts should focus on: Keeping regular and detailed records of activities suspected of being gang stalking. This includes times, dates, details and information about each occurrence. Taking photographs or videos of any evidence left behind and saving it as an easily reference record of what occurred. This comes in handy later on when it’s time to show a pattern of behavior. It also corroborates the victim’s statements of what occurred. Keeping a file on every interaction with law enforcement. This includes officer names, case numbers, departments, and who takes evidence from a reported scene if it occurs. Also try to get the incident number and event number from the officer or police department as record tracking can happen under different systems. Being proactive and obtaining a licensed psychological evaluation as soon as gang stalking starts. This defuses and eliminates any argument by non-psychologists that a target is going crazy. The fact that an evaluation says otherwise long before they every came to their conclusion refutes such assumptions before they start. Speaking up and being noisy about what’s occurring. Gang stalking groups want a target to stay silent, to cave in and go into isolation. A noisy target eventually gets someone’s attention to starts to take action against the group. Remembering that stalking is a crime in most jurisdictions, even if done anonymously by a group. Every group eventually has a weakness and can be found out. In fact, groups are more vulnerable to identification than a lone individual. Focusing on nailing down one person’s identification can very quickly lead to the rest of the group, especially if one of them is dumb enough to get caught and arrested. Gang stalking can be far more powerful in effect than a simple bully, but the problem is the same. The group will often continue to do what it does until the victim stops taking the abuse and starts to push back. When a group gets exposed, it’s power is gone. So every response should aim at meeting this goal of eliminating the effects of Gang Stalking.
Posted on: Wed, 26 Nov 2014 00:33:38 +0000

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