From: raven1
email: raven1@alpha.netaccess.on.ca
Date: Tue, 12 Nov 1996
Subject: Shielding type worth further exploration
For the last two nights, I've been trying a new approach to
shielding which (a) seems to have merit and (b) actually got the
"endorsement of success" from my harassers.
How can harassers, who remain totally covert," endorse" shielding? Well, in the 2 years since I moved in to my present apartment building, there have been two instances of the building-wide fake fire alarm (with a loud smoke-detector-like signal in every apartment) and three of a "fake" (i.e. staged) all-building electrical power outage in the middle of the night, typically lasting a couple of hours. (The power was out in the building only, not the street.)
These 5 instances were all on nights where a new and significantly successful shielding arrangement had just been put into use around my bed. (It should be noted that both the super and ass't. super have repeatedly done conventional harassment things to me, and are obviously on the harassment payroll.)
OK - as to the shielding type: I used semi-conducting shielding the past two nights.
Steel works great, but requires that there be no cracks. They can aim their masers at a crack, and a steel enclosure does a beautiful job, if their aim is good enough, of bouncing the harassment signal around the inside of the enclosure until it gets absorbed by your body. Their aim must be good, but in my case lately, they have left little signs of a break-in almost daily. (Even when I go to the laundry room!)
I'm sure these break-ins help them in their aiming process.
My 4-inch foam mattress rests in a steel trough formed from nice clean new galvanized air duct pipe which was never locked into a cylinder, but instead flattened out. (The idea was the turned up edges were good at shielding against maser beams from the apartment below, and it worked well for a little while.)
Trouble is, a flattened cylinder with the edges turned up is also a great reflector, similar to a solar water heater. The harassers began to cause itching and pain on the side of my body facing down, into the steel trough. That meant they were aiming through a crack and reflecting off the trough, causing discomfort on the side of my body facing down.
Radar absorptive paint is way to expensive for me. But I do have a few 18-inch square anti-static bags used to ship electronic equipment. These bags can be bought from several suppliers - if you want some, try your nearest large computer equipment or general elec- tronics supply house (like Newark Electronics).
I placed one cut-open bag, 18" x 36" just under my sheet and this put it almost in contact with whichever body side was facing down, with a couple inches of compressed mattress between the semi-con plastic and the surface of the steel trough. Instant relief!! I couldn't believe it, but it totally eliminated the under-body reflection problem.
Last night, I took another 18" x 18" anti-static bag and wore it over my head like a hood. Breathing is crude, with the small air circulator fan inside my enclosure just barely doing enough, but I was able to sleep comfortably for a while (until the power outage.) I'm going to work on an improved breathing device.
Every single night, I go to bed at around 7:45 p.m., and for about an hour, the harassers use their MIND mind reader to determine exactly when I start to go under, and they zap me with a violent muscle jerk right at that point.
This prevents anything like that first really deep phase of normal sleep. Any sleep at all becomes a sort of "gift" from the harassers.
Last night that never happened. What is so exciting is that a good semi-conductive shield may be effective in defeating the MIND mind reader! Since the mind reader is really the centrepiece of the harassers' equipment, this is a really exciting possibility.
Finally, there is an alternative semi-conductive material which might be best of all but it's too expensive for me to try: It is the so-called "pin-insertion foam", which is jet black and is foam rubber containing lots of carbon. It is used to store and ship static sensitive chips, by shorting all their pins together.
A one-meter x one-meter x 1/8" piece is about $75 US in a several years old Newark catalogue here.
If someone "out there" can try a piece, it would be great to find out how that works.
All the best,
raven1