Great content for anyone having questions about surveillance, or thinking about it as a career. It has to be high stress work, but if done properly, can be enjoyable as you pointed out in the last tip! Well done!
Thanks! Covert surveillance definitely has it's stressful moments. I have found that surveillance training has been critical for new investigators looking at enhancing their career in the surveillance area. There is a lot of advice out there for free, but experience makes a Master Surveillant!
I don't think it's high stress. High stress for me is a very difficult family member who I allow myself to get agitated about to the point of rage and high blood pressure. Was in many high danger situations, and I was never out of control, but it somehow calmed me, and everything slowed down. High stress would be working with toxic catty people.
Thanks for the advice. Sounds pretty helpful. But you did miss spoke when you said that it takes more energy to smile than frown. Actually that’s the opposite. It is less muscles and energy to smile than it is to frown. And just like negativity positivity is contagious too so you were right on that. Thank you for your input.
OMG, did I say that? good one...my first ever YT video and I did say that wrong and I know that it takes less muscles to smile than frown. You are the first to point that out. Good spot! I guess I was nervous...lol! Thanks for watching!
Can you do a video on mobile surveillance techniques? I’m a new PI and I can totally relate to the paranoia. I always continue on main roads and do a quick turn around in a driveway then follow my subject onto the side streets because I think they’ve spotted me. Happened today after following someone for over a half hour on solo surveillance. They took a right out of a neighborhood and directly back into the neighborhood at the next turn and I got stuck since I had to break into traffic to turn around. Thanks for any help. This video was very helpful.
I feel your pain...solo surveillance is the worst. Especially when it comes to navigating a neighborhood. It sounds like your using common sense and doing the best based on your environment. I have a full online course, but will take a part of the mobile surveillance module and post it. Paranoia is the worst, but a reality because the only thing you can use to establish a potential "burn" is the actions of the Subject.
Thanks for the feedback, and for watching. Yeah...it was my first video. I've learned a lot since then, but still don't have much time to produce. It's one of those videos to break the ice...kids sleeping in the background so I'm trying to be quiet too...lol!
in the beginning there's a huge bang and loud music ,,, then later the volume of the voice is very low :S:S:S gotta turn it up , then there's the loud music again ( waking up all my room mates ) , it's amazing how many content creators don't know how to assess their own content .
I have a vehicle surveillance video, but you only need a minimum of 3-4 vehicles to contain a subject vehicle. It's not ideal. Rarely do you have more than a 7 vehicle surveillance team on a vehicle as the resources are usually limited. We ran 3 teams on a night-time safe-cracking crew that used countersurveillance, so that was about 18 detectives. And we had aircraft and a helicopter on standby out of sound.
There are some cheap detectors that work with various frequencies. I have only used them to look for GPS trackers on vehicles. I haven't used them for locating covert transmitting cameras. Here are some at PI Gear where I buy a lot of equipment. I am not an affiliate and make no money from referrals. The owner is a patriot and very helpful with equipment. www.pigear.com/BUG-DETECTION-TCSM_c_169.html
Yes it is an ancient art that is more dependent on street strategies and tactics than electronic equipment. Equipment has advanced significantly over the years, but is useless if it is not used in the right manner.
Okay, number one own humble opinion is to look at the area you will be working in and see how you might fit in without being noticed and from where you might have the best advantage point, and so by casing the area you will know what type of colths to wear according to your role that you are about to play; of course if you know that you will be working from a particular area well before hand months years you might hve more time to acclimatise and for people to except you as being a member of that community. And so number two goew as you have said number one would go. In my own humble personal opinion that is but I am not an expert like you of course.
Unfortunately most large investigative organizations loss the art of surveillance in the bureaucracy and operate more like an assembly of processes. In essence they hire new surveillants with no experience, give them brief training, and send them out on the street. It's purely a money generating machine to keep up with case load. I mostly contract out my surveillance skills to other agencies that are willing to pay what it takes to get the evidence or intelligence if it's there... Insurance companies are notorious for small budgets that barely get you to the location and back...and evidence seems secondary.
Reference #6? Paranoia is a real problem with Surveillants. It’s easy to read into behavior and actions and assume it’s a burn. When in reality it’s other factors that are causing the behaviors.
The ones who die for motherland can do wonders in the field 🙏✌️✌️ I guess techniques have changed with PERSONAL personality it’s not JUST THIS . Just to some who think that’s JUST all . Na it’s better 🙏
Hey! I couldn't really follow your statement, but thanks for commenting. There are few who will die for God, country, or family. Warriors are the 1%...
I read it a couple years back. I found the book to be of value from his perspective. The Illustrations were interesting...hand drawn. We can ALWAYS learn something from others in the field and should ALWAYS be learning. Although I've written 7 professional books, I still seek and learn from others. I disagree with his notion that surveillance equipment must be selected based on the ability to date/time stamp video and images. This extremely limits your choice. With digital metadata you can now use software to extract date/time stamping and impose it on a photo or video. I demonstrate the process here: ua-cam.com/video/rJOtWvgimAw/v-deo.html. Whether it's equipment that has Date/Time stamp built in, or you extract it from metadata, it can be altered. Photographic evidence depicts a scene at a date and time. When testifying in court and photographs and video is being admitted into evidence an investigator is asked if the photo accurately depicts the scene as the investigator observed it on that date and time. That's it. If it has been altered and doesn't accurately represent the scene (altered, wrong date/time), and the investigator said it did, that would be perjury.
@@MasterSurveillant In his book Eddie Cruz does admit that you are limited in selection in your selection, however, in my experience it’s not by much. Wouldn’t it be just simpler to to get equipment that already has date/stamp capability than adding another step? I’m not trying to be a pain, I’m just trying to reason this out for myself since I make it a habit to study this. Employers are not going to pay me extra for the time it will take me to try and collect Metadata that can be collected more easily. I have a high success rate using equipment that has that has date time stamp features. And why would their be a question of video that has been altered if I didn’t do it. In that case I wouldn’t have to worry about it. The same can then be said of the Metadata software. Thank you for your time.
@@ericnieves1541 I haven’t used equipment in over 15 years that has a date/time stamp function. And these are not expensive digital camcorders. If what you have works fine then great. When you start adding lens the choices are slimmer with modern cameras. The only video I date and time stamped was relevant video evidence of crimes I recorded or when it was a insurance case. I rarely worked insurance and frankly the date/time stamp is merely a convenience for attorneys as most cases rarely went to court. Reference altered video it’s standard questioning in admitting evidence by a competent attorney asking questions establishing relevance in a case of who recorded it, and if it accurately depicts the scene, amongst other basic questions. As for time...do you write reports? I would burn the videos, and often strip audio if it wasn’t omitted, while writing my reports. It worked in the background and is a great option for moving the stamp to an area of the video that may have evidence. Anyway, you do you...if it works.
I could give you advice and conducting physical surveillance in a casino with a covert camera, but not the CCTV aspect as I have no experience in that realm. When doing physical surveillance in a Casino DO NOT TELL THE CASINO...or they will kick you out. That includes telling law enforcement. I learned that the hard way when I followed a counterfeit currency gal into a local AZ Casino (on the Pima Indian Reservation near Scottsdale AZ) and asked security if they could monitor her to see if she passed any bills. I was told I had to leave the casino and wait for Indian Reservation Police to arrive and escort me. Mind, you I was a Phoenix Police Detective at the time. By the time the cop showed up, my gal was on her way out and I resumed the surveillance. I have NO idea if she committed a crime at the casino, but apparently they didn't care enough. Thus, all my surveillance from that point on at casinos, and I have conducted quite a few, I do without informing the casino. You have to be extra careful while in the casino and blend in the best you can or security will spot you on the CCTV. My partner was asked once after I quickly left on a suspect, and he denied it. I could tell security presence was getting think around us, but it worked out.
Depending on whether I was a police detective or a private/corporate investigator it differed. When I was a detective it depended on the neighborhood. Many times I would tell a curious neighbor we were conducting a burglary reduction surveillance, due to increased burglaries in the area. If the neighbor seemed pro-police I would ask if they have noticed anything in their neighborhood. Many times they would reference the house I had under surveillance. If they seemed like a good citizen I would ask to use their driveway to continue my surveillance. They usually were open to the idea. When I began private/corporate/retail investigations I often used the pretext of looking for a runaway child and was following up on a tip they were in the neighborhood, or at a specific residence, but I wasn't at liberty to disclose it. The emotional factor is a good means to get buy in from neighbors. Most will think.."ohh, how sad, I hope you find the child." Or "I don't want no burglar in MY neighborhood." Some pretexts that are simpler are the real estate investor...
@@MasterSurveillant Thank you for the tip! Just out of curiosity what do surveillance investigators such as yourself do for going to the bathroom? Bottle with a screw on cap for #1 and hold for #2's?
ndguitarplayer great question! the bottle is my best friend for #1 and fortunately for #2 I remain human and take care of business like a normal person. There are ways to take care of the nasty business but if you know your body and normal bowel movements you can plan. I have rarely been in a situation where it’s urgent, and when it was it was usually due to poor eating or illness.
Bro an orange flashing light and a safety vest you can park anywhere and they might talk to you but just look like you are working on communication boxes or fiber I do traffic control and people actively ignore us
Thanks for sharing that tip! That works too! Hiding in plain site. We did that on a homicide suspect in a rural area and couldn't get an eye without being in the open. Our homicide detectives had pickup trucks and a couple got hard hats, orange vests, and one new lasering equipment and went to work! It was a marijuana grow in Arizona City, Arizona that was connecting to a homicide suspect we were working.
@@tylerbeard2064 I haven't had a use for mine yet in the private sector, but I know my LE detectives use them in place of normal aircraft flyovers, whether for scouting or search warrant pre-planning.
Yep...we are all creatures of habit. And it rarely changes. Consider your routes to work, or how you towel after taking a shower. Do you vary these practices? Have you noticed peoples habits while on surveillance?
lonewolf trucker exactly! Lots of reasons to conduct surveillance. Law enforcement can be proactive on criminals and catch them in the act. Evidence that’s hard to beat.
Yeah, I know....first video on UA-cam. We all have to start somewhere. Most people are just critics from the sidelines of life....😉 Never entering the arena!
I'm only familiar with legit covert surveillance, which done properly results in no harm to the target...unless of course they are involved in criminal or fraudulent behavior. Covert surveillance provides an non-intrusive way to develop intelligence or evidence. To just target a person for no legit reason is a waste of time and would be "Stalking" in some circumstances. Or unfair discrimination or persecution if it negatively disrupts one's life.
@@refri17ner95 Honestly I'm not well versed in the concept, but upon review found it more comprehensive than just surveillance. Was never into psychops.
Prometheus, he did not grant humanity fire. Prometheus, he told humanity that you are, have been, under Orwellian-style surveillance since the start of life on this planet, long before the construction of Angor Wat. In fact, there are a series of antennae one could fashion, that one could employ, to pick up, to translate, electric data into the visual spectrum - that is, you can get a visual picture without using a camera lens, only antennae. Both antennae and camera pens collect phenomena within the electro-magnetic spectrum; it's that simple. HAARP works sort of like that. Don't believe me? Check out the 14 different antennae on the roof at 29 Morningside street in Arlington, Massachusetts and try to guess what is popping up on flat screen viewing opportunities inside at that address.
Ready to implement then? Yeah, my content isn't really made for Drifters, more for the Driven. Considering that was my first video, don't waste time on my 12 hour course then...or my Surveillance textbook....lol!
Great content for anyone having questions about surveillance, or thinking about it as a career. It has to be high stress work, but if done properly, can be enjoyable as you pointed out in the last tip! Well done!
Thanks! Covert surveillance definitely has it's stressful moments. I have found that surveillance training has been critical for new investigators looking at enhancing their career in the surveillance area. There is a lot of advice out there for free, but experience makes a Master Surveillant!
I don't think it's high stress. High stress for me is a very difficult family member who I allow myself to get agitated about to the point of rage and high blood pressure. Was in many high danger situations, and I was never out of control, but it somehow calmed me, and everything slowed down.
High stress would be working with toxic catty people.
5:00 I GUESS PEOPLE CAN DRIVE RESPONSIBLY, WHILST ON DRUGS EH? 😂😂😂
Stupid mofos
Not at all, but they do sometimes get overly focused…tunnel vision.
Great advice, I just started my PI course, also work in security, so am enjoying all the content, cheers
Thanks!
Thks for the insight it is really intresting
Perfect points in surveillance! Great job!
Remote viewing scan also. What if we're supposed to get into it and/or set up an ambush?
Not sure what you are referring to. Are you talking unmanned surveillance in general? That is a safe and useful option.
Top notch info. Thanks for the great tips!
You are welcome! Glad to share them!
Thanks for the advice. Sounds pretty helpful. But you did miss spoke when you said that it takes more energy to smile than frown. Actually that’s the opposite. It is less muscles and energy to smile than it is to frown. And just like negativity positivity is contagious too so you were right on that. Thank you for your input.
OMG, did I say that? good one...my first ever YT video and I did say that wrong and I know that it takes less muscles to smile than frown. You are the first to point that out. Good spot! I guess I was nervous...lol! Thanks for watching!
Awesome advice! Thank you for being straight to the point.
Thanks for watching! It was my first training video, yet does get to the point.
@@MasterSurveillant well you did great for a first training vid congrats
@@ElektriKfaUN Thanks! My son always tells me..."you only gotta be at 80%" Unfortunately I'm a perfectionist, which gets in the way of results...
Thanks so much, a big lesson!!
Thanks! It's my first video, so a bit rough, but the tips have always held true!
Have you checked out the book “Surveillance: A Concept of the Art” by Eddie Cruz?
Can you do a video on mobile surveillance techniques? I’m a new PI and I can totally relate to the paranoia. I always continue on main roads and do a quick turn around in a driveway then follow my subject onto the side streets because I think they’ve spotted me. Happened today after following someone for over a half hour on solo surveillance. They took a right out of a neighborhood and directly back into the neighborhood at the next turn and I got stuck since I had to break into traffic to turn around. Thanks for any help. This video was very helpful.
I feel your pain...solo surveillance is the worst. Especially when it comes to navigating a neighborhood. It sounds like your using common sense and doing the best based on your environment. I have a full online course, but will take a part of the mobile surveillance module and post it. Paranoia is the worst, but a reality because the only thing you can use to establish a potential "burn" is the actions of the Subject.
Thank you😎
Thanks! wasn’t sure what you were referring to reference .6 the target…
Helpful tips. Thank you.
Music distracting. Not necessary.
Thanks for the feedback, and for watching.
Yeah...it was my first video. I've learned a lot since then, but still don't have much time to produce.
It's one of those videos to break the ice...kids sleeping in the background so I'm trying to be quiet too...lol!
Wow great info I’ve been doing most of this ,but I dint know what I was doing great.
Excellent! Thanks for watching.
in the beginning there's a huge bang and loud music ,,, then later the volume of the voice is very low :S:S:S gotta turn it up , then there's the loud music again ( waking up all my room mates ) , it's amazing how many content creators don't know how to assess their own content .
Yeah. This was my first video. We all gotta start somewhere and take the wrath of the experts...😉
Considering I haven’t produced in quite some time...I’m
Nearing my first 1000 subs. Exciting for us little guys on YT.
Can you make a video on box car sirvillance when 12 vehicles survial you in box theory
I have a vehicle surveillance video, but you only need a minimum of 3-4 vehicles to contain a subject vehicle. It's not ideal. Rarely do you have more than a 7 vehicle surveillance team on a vehicle as the resources are usually limited. We ran 3 teams on a night-time safe-cracking crew that used countersurveillance, so that was about 18 detectives. And we had aircraft and a helicopter on standby out of sound.
Thank's for sharing this video
Chiheb Mustapha thanks for watching!
Question what unit detects wfi/ Rf frequecies in hidden cameras transiting a signal?
There are some cheap detectors that work with various frequencies. I have only used them to look for GPS trackers on vehicles. I haven't used them for locating covert transmitting cameras. Here are some at PI Gear where I buy a lot of equipment. I am not an affiliate and make no money from referrals. The owner is a patriot and very helpful with equipment. www.pigear.com/BUG-DETECTION-TCSM_c_169.html
Great advice!!!
Thanks! It's a real-world game....win some. lose some.
WOW ~ quite an Art to this 'game' !
Yes it is an ancient art that is more dependent on street strategies and tactics than electronic equipment. Equipment has advanced significantly over the years, but is useless if it is not used in the right manner.
Be physically fit to counter confrontation, carried personal protective weapon at all times!
That never hurts...Well maybe the assailant...smart!
Okay, number one own humble opinion is to look at the area you will be working in and see how you might fit in without being noticed and from where you might have the best advantage point, and so by casing the area you will know what type of colths to wear according to your role that you are about to play; of course if you know that you will be working from a particular area well before hand months years you might hve more time to acclimatise and for people to except you as being a member of that community. And so number two goew as you have said number one would go. In my own humble personal opinion that is but I am not an expert like you of course.
Sounds like a great assessment of blending into an environment! Thanks for watching.
Your not wrong.
You should your video to companies like Ethos and CoventBridge Group they need the help...
Unfortunately most large investigative organizations loss the art of surveillance in the bureaucracy and operate more like an assembly of processes. In essence they hire new surveillants with no experience, give them brief training, and send them out on the street. It's purely a money generating machine to keep up with case load. I mostly contract out my surveillance skills to other agencies that are willing to pay what it takes to get the evidence or intelligence if it's there...
Insurance companies are notorious for small budgets that barely get you to the location and back...and evidence seems secondary.
@@MasterSurveillant Very true.
6. Especially if the Subject is Targeted.
Reference #6? Paranoia is a real problem with Surveillants. It’s easy to read into behavior and actions and assume it’s a burn. When in reality it’s other factors that are causing the behaviors.
No music next time.
The ones who die for motherland can do wonders in the field 🙏✌️✌️ I guess techniques have changed with PERSONAL personality it’s not JUST THIS . Just to some who think that’s JUST all . Na it’s better 🙏
Hey! I couldn't really follow your statement, but thanks for commenting. There are few who will die for God, country, or family. Warriors are the 1%...
Have you checked out the book, “Surveiilance: A Concept of the Art” by Eddie Cruz/
I read it a couple years back. I found the book to be of value from his perspective. The Illustrations were interesting...hand drawn. We can ALWAYS learn something from others in the field and should ALWAYS be learning. Although I've written 7 professional books, I still seek and learn from others.
I disagree with his notion that surveillance equipment must be selected based on the ability to date/time stamp video and images. This extremely limits your choice. With digital metadata you can now use software to extract date/time stamping and impose it on a photo or video. I demonstrate the process here: ua-cam.com/video/rJOtWvgimAw/v-deo.html.
Whether it's equipment that has Date/Time stamp built in, or you extract it from metadata, it can be altered. Photographic evidence depicts a scene at a date and time. When testifying in court and photographs and video is being admitted into evidence an investigator is asked if the photo accurately depicts the scene as the investigator observed it on that date and time. That's it. If it has been altered and doesn't accurately represent the scene (altered, wrong date/time), and the investigator said it did, that would be perjury.
@@MasterSurveillant In his book Eddie Cruz does admit that you are limited in selection in your selection, however, in my experience it’s not by much. Wouldn’t it be just simpler to to get equipment that already has date/stamp capability than adding another step? I’m not trying to be a pain, I’m just trying to reason this out for myself since I make it a habit to study this. Employers are not going to pay me extra for the time it will take me to try and collect Metadata that can be collected more easily. I have a high success rate using equipment that has that has date time stamp features.
And why would their be a question of video that has been altered if I didn’t do it. In that case I wouldn’t have to worry about it. The same can then be said of the Metadata software. Thank you for your time.
@@ericnieves1541 I haven’t used equipment in over 15 years that has a date/time stamp function. And these are not expensive digital camcorders. If what you have works fine then great. When you start adding lens the choices are slimmer with modern cameras. The only video I date and time stamped was relevant video evidence of crimes I recorded or when it was a insurance case. I rarely worked insurance and frankly the date/time stamp is merely a convenience for attorneys as most cases rarely went to court.
Reference altered video it’s standard questioning in admitting evidence by a competent attorney asking questions establishing relevance in a case of who recorded it, and if it accurately depicts the scene, amongst other basic questions.
As for time...do you write reports? I would burn the videos, and often strip audio if it wasn’t omitted, while writing my reports. It worked in the background and is a great option for moving the stamp to an area of the video that may have evidence. Anyway, you do you...if it works.
Ok. Thanks.
@@MasterSurveillant last question. So what equipment do you use to record out in the field. Btw I tried to
Advise for video surveillance, such as casino and gaming watching multiple monitors
I could give you advice and conducting physical surveillance in a casino with a covert camera, but not the CCTV aspect as I have no experience in that realm. When doing physical surveillance in a Casino DO NOT TELL THE CASINO...or they will kick you out. That includes telling law enforcement. I learned that the hard way when I followed a counterfeit currency gal into a local AZ Casino (on the Pima Indian Reservation near Scottsdale AZ) and asked security if they could monitor her to see if she passed any bills. I was told I had to leave the casino and wait for Indian Reservation Police to arrive and escort me. Mind, you I was a Phoenix Police Detective at the time. By the time the cop showed up, my gal was on her way out and I resumed the surveillance. I have NO idea if she committed a crime at the casino, but apparently they didn't care enough. Thus, all my surveillance from that point on at casinos, and I have conducted quite a few, I do without informing the casino. You have to be extra careful while in the casino and blend in the best you can or security will spot you on the CCTV. My partner was asked once after I quickly left on a suspect, and he denied it. I could tell security presence was getting think around us, but it worked out.
Let me see what this is all about
It’s a real world game of wits’ 😎
What are your top go to pretexts on a case?
Depending on whether I was a police detective or a private/corporate investigator it differed. When I was a detective it depended on the neighborhood. Many times I would tell a curious neighbor we were conducting a burglary reduction surveillance, due to increased burglaries in the area. If the neighbor seemed pro-police I would ask if they have noticed anything in their neighborhood. Many times they would reference the house I had under surveillance. If they seemed like a good citizen I would ask to use their driveway to continue my surveillance. They usually were open to the idea.
When I began private/corporate/retail investigations I often used the pretext of looking for a runaway child and was following up on a tip they were in the neighborhood, or at a specific residence, but I wasn't at liberty to disclose it.
The emotional factor is a good means to get buy in from neighbors. Most will think.."ohh, how sad, I hope you find the child." Or "I don't want no burglar in MY neighborhood." Some pretexts that are simpler are the real estate investor...
@@MasterSurveillant Thank you for the tip! Just out of curiosity what do surveillance investigators such as yourself do for going to the bathroom? Bottle with a screw on cap for #1 and hold for #2's?
ndguitarplayer great question! the bottle is my best friend for #1 and fortunately for #2 I remain human and take care of business like a normal person. There are ways to take care of the nasty business but if you know your body and normal bowel movements you can plan. I have rarely been in a situation where it’s urgent, and when it was it was usually due to poor eating or illness.
@@MasterSurveillant Thank you for the response! I enjoy your videos!
Bro an orange flashing light and a safety vest you can park anywhere and they might talk to you but just look like you are working on communication boxes or fiber I do traffic control and people actively ignore us
Thanks for sharing that tip!
That works too!
Hiding in plain site. We did that on a homicide suspect in a rural area and couldn't get an eye without being in the open. Our homicide detectives had pickup trucks and a couple got hard hats, orange vests, and one new lasering equipment and went to work!
It was a marijuana grow in Arizona City, Arizona that was connecting to a homicide suspect we were working.
@@MasterSurveillant that's cool af how does drones work out for you guys
@@tylerbeard2064 I haven't had a use for mine yet in the private sector, but I know my LE detectives use them in place of normal aircraft flyovers, whether for scouting or search warrant pre-planning.
No. 5: "Accessing habits" ??? Really?
Yep...we are all creatures of habit. And it rarely changes. Consider your routes to work, or how you towel after taking a shower. Do you vary these practices? Have you noticed peoples habits while on surveillance?
"It takes more energy to smile than it does to frown"??? That's not true.
You are correct and I even know that.😆 I meant it takes more effort. Good catch!
What's the purpose of this job?
Not sure what you mean. But surveillance is a tool used by investigators to gather evidence or intelligence either for criminal or civil purposes.
lonewolf trucker exactly! Lots of reasons to conduct surveillance. Law enforcement can be proactive on criminals and catch them in the act. Evidence that’s hard to beat.
@@lonewolftrucker3955 I see.
🤣
Yeah, I know....first video on UA-cam. We all have to start somewhere. Most people are just critics from the sidelines of life....😉 Never entering the arena!
@@MasterSurveillant your doing a job keep it up
Sound like you might know a thing or two about gangstalking.
I'm only familiar with legit covert surveillance, which done properly results in no harm to the target...unless of course they are involved in criminal or fraudulent behavior. Covert surveillance provides an non-intrusive way to develop intelligence or evidence. To just target a person for no legit reason is a waste of time and would be "Stalking" in some circumstances. Or unfair discrimination or persecution if it negatively disrupts one's life.
@@MasterSurveillant do you know what gangstalking is? Who they are
@@refri17ner95 Honestly I'm not well versed in the concept, but upon review found it more comprehensive than just surveillance. Was never into psychops.
Prometheus, he did not grant humanity fire. Prometheus, he told humanity that you are, have been, under Orwellian-style surveillance since the start of life on this planet, long before the construction of Angor Wat. In fact, there are a series of antennae one could fashion, that one could employ, to pick up, to translate, electric data into the visual spectrum - that is, you can get a visual picture without using a camera lens, only antennae. Both antennae and camera pens collect phenomena within the electro-magnetic spectrum; it's that simple. HAARP works sort of like that. Don't believe me? Check out the 14 different antennae on the roof at 29 Morningside street in Arlington, Massachusetts and try to guess what is popping up on flat screen viewing opportunities inside at that address.
The whole monologue is wayyyyyy too longgggggg!!! I simply skipped to the end. Period.
Ready to implement then? Yeah, my content isn't really made for Drifters, more for the Driven.
Considering that was my first video, don't waste time on my 12 hour course then...or my Surveillance textbook....lol!
Copy that sir
Am sgt. Ahmed.
Am from horn of #Africa #Somalia #Mogadishu #city 🏖
Thank you for watching Sir!