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Tuesday, July 11, 2023

NSA Zersetzung (Gaslighting)

Zersetzung literally means decomposition in German. The term refers to a psychological warfare tactic used by the East German secret police against dissidents. Americans call this method gaslighting, which is the practice of trying to unnerve someone and get them to doubt their sanity through various tricks. It is also a way to silence and discredit people. 

I present the following facts and evidence that my former employer, the National Security Agency, has been spying on me and harassing me. I do not make this accusation lightly, all the more so because I still hope to work there as a code breaker. The last time I asked NSA about my application, they said I have the right skills and that a recruiter would contact me. For a complete account, please email me at harty.thomas@gmail.com for a copy of my autobiography. I can furnish other documents as well to corroborate my story. Below is a screenshot of my NSA code breaker application:



While at NSA, I worked in a section called FGX3B23. FGX stands for the Directorate of Operations and 3B23 refers to the terrorist group the section surveilled. I joined the Army to be a linguist and after completing the Arabic course, I was assigned to the NSA group at Fort Gordon. I enjoyed my work and hoped to continue it as a civilian. Unfortunately, after I repeatedly denied being suicidal, a dozen people lied to my face to trap me in a psychiatric ward. I ended up leaving the Army six months ahead of schedule with a general discharge, though my company commander recommended an honorable one.   

In late March 2021, I first saw these mysterious black screens appear as I was telling some online friends about the ordeal I had endured. A link to a video showing the same screens is below. It and the others that follow are best viewed in full-screen mode. 

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3Y38c59YfAY

I should add that not long after I accused NSA of spying on me via the word processor Notepad, which should have only been visible to me, my laptop started working much better and I stopped getting "IRQL not equal" errors.

Later, I would only see the screens intermittently and only after I had connected to the internet. Many other odd things started happening not just to my laptop, but also my other wireless devices, all of which used different operating systems. 

This was my first indication that something odd was happening: a message saying that Google had detected unusual activity on my computer network. 


Some examples: some very weird things happened to my Raspberry Pi-4 computer, as shown below:


This happened during a GPU stress test. The screen was supposed to show an animation of meshed gears turning. 



If you unscramble the letters in the captions, it says "Hey, so what do you think about dinner?" This means one program correctly transcribed the English audio and another program jumbled the letters. 



The browser on my Raspberry Pi-4 computer got scrambled a few days after I started using it. Everything else worked fine. Near the middle of the screen, you can see a small gray box with "YouTube" written in it. The browser mysteriously got unscrambled a few months later after I emailed my autobiography to a friend who is a computer expert. 

On my laptop, the captions sometimes came in the wrong language or gibberish.


In the dialog box, instead of giving a list of languages for subtitles, it says "root". Root access means total control over another computer remotely. And the subtitles for this English song are in Turkish for some reason. 


Seemingly random letters in the captions here. 


The audio in this video was English, and YouTube is pretty good with language recognition. And yet, the auto-generated subtitles are Korean. 


The subtitles here are set to English, the audio is English, but the subtitles are in German. 

There was an odd spike in views on this blog in late October 2021. At the time, it had been over six years since I had updated the blog. The only noteworthy thing about that day was that I had viewed a few pages on the blog. It seems the best explanation for the spike is that whatever NSA snoop was watching my screen that day blabbed about it and word got around to a bunch of other people. 


OK, how about a hardware glitch? The caps lock on this brand-new keyboard started turning on and off by itself:

Caps lock turning on and off by itself; more NSA tricknology? - YouTube

Sorry about the rotation, it was correct in the original file.

And now, the grand finale, which is proof that NSA has been spying on my phone and could somehow access the wireless device in my apartment door lock. A sequence of events like this happened every time I locked or unlocked my apartment for three weeks, at all hours of the day and night.

Proof NSA is spying on me and has been harassing me - YouTube

Some of these tricks were fun to experience; others not so much. I certainly did not appreciate the time they blasted static into my ears whenever I tried to watch a YouTube video. That went on for five days until I made clear that I am not defenseless. Regardless, it has been going on for over two years and my patience is wearing thin. I estimate that they've spent at least half a million dollars spying on me, and that is several times what it would cost to simply hire me as a code breaker.

It's been almost two years since the longest war in US history ended in catastrophic defeat after 20 years, a trillion dollars and 2,000 dead US troops. Six months after that debacle, we got into a proxy war with Russia which has cost us about $100 billion so far. China flew a spy balloon over the US and is gearing up to invade Taiwan. This is a situation where code breakers could do a lot of good, and delaying the hiring of someone eminently qualified for that job is an act of criminal stupidity.