› Forums › Personal Topics › Unbidden Thoughts › Security Against Excavation Attacks
This topic contains 8 replies, has 2 voices, and was last updated by
Josh Stern February 6, 2023 at 3:11 am.
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June 21, 2022 at 1:46 pm #116882

joshThe latest round of attacks are focused on producing a lot of landscape pebbles alongside or as an alternative to roots, where roots are even less plausible.
The favorite move of the artificial pebbles, as you would imagine, is “pass it on”. There are – how do you say – not the sharpest tools in the mafia shed. They can be picked up & moved to places where you would rather keep the extra energy.
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June 27, 2022 at 11:37 am #117255

JoshThe pebbles are too easy too move & slow to lay over long underground distances, while being inefficient – special purpose.
I have neutralized a lot of roots, somewhat helped by the original premise of aligning one of their directions with a tree base, stemming out of the original tree roots in some cases.
In response, the large full time, frequently replaced local teams are
a) laying *a lot more* roots daily
b) using roots with more electrical efficiency & less pretense of being real, at any convenient location & coloring.
c) using smaller roots that branch more
d) running voltage in alternate directions. This is somewhat key. In the old scheme, the oscillating signal would be based on raising the overall voltage to inside the house while adding an oscillating signal on top of the raised base voltage. In this new scheme, running voltage in both directions allows the oscillating signal to be found in the base frequency. The runs that get charged that way, inside the house, tend to be shorter, but with a faster start up time if they are near the impacted locations.
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June 28, 2022 at 6:16 am #117328

JoshFor isolated folks, without tech, in a do yourself situation. My current recommendation is this kit:
hammer + 18 inch flat screwdriver or chisel,
Sodium Hydroxide (best – check deals on Amazon,etc) or baking soda or crushed lime is cheap in bulk
iron filings (not necessary but effective)
garden spade/”root slayer”Identify where underground roots are crossing based on incidence to house, sensation of EMF outside, & sometimes plausible deniability of direction to trees or shrubs. Drive long screwdriver into the ground & motion side to side to break small root or create significant gashes in big roots. The artificial roots are a lot tougher than real roots & you may have trouble with medium size ones that shift side to side without breaking with the screwdriver. In that case, breaking or excavating with the spade is recommended.
Pour a mixture of sodium hydroxide & filings into the hole & fill with water. Sodium hydroxide is used for sewer line cleaning & will melt the artificial roots enough to damage them. Baking soda or lime will not do that, but will damage the conductivity, especially if there are gaps or gashes. The iron filings help to short circuit & confuse the electrical network.
Also recommended, where you sense a lot of EMF coming from a large tree, find a spot where the tree is turning into roots & the EMF is high – drill a hote in the root & fill it with conducting copper tape or iron filings to short circuit the electrics there. This can help you & due a bit to discourage further destruction of your valuablel tree.
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October 31, 2022 at 11:10 am #124313

Josh Stern
ModeratorIt turns out that there are various IoT signals which, by network design, draw the underground energy flow to them. There are also some that repulse flow in that direction. For ice fans, A line of small, economical, “solar powered” landscape lights could be marked as those to be placed near the structure & those to be placed far away, with the hidden meaning of drawing or repulsing the root energy flows, aiming it away from the structure or some other area of interest like a patio.
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November 25, 2022 at 9:22 am #124981

Josh Stern
ModeratorThe Canadian mafia, for obvious reasons, are frozen ground specialists. It takes more effort to lay roots in frozen ground, but modern droids are stronger & they can get brief spells of help near the surface from weather control. When the ground is frozen, many of the IoT methods don’t give much signal in the yard. They take advantage of this by putting out a signal over the electrical wires going to the house. Knocking out that or overridding it in the yard is a general issue that pops up especially in the frozen months.
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January 27, 2023 at 10:47 am #126194

Josh Stern
ModeratorTwo Helpful Updates For Do-it-yourselfers & Ideas for Developers:
a) Some solar lighting posts/strings etc. have been configured developed to draw the “attack with positive charge” (which in reality is draw away negative charge) attack. The developers concept is helping EEkill by signaling the house is a target. But if you place the lights at the far extremity of your property or the area which includes activated root attack networks, they will help to make the attack current flow to that place rather than to the walls & inside of your dwelling. You can shop on Amazon for instance – look at I key for descriptions of which products have this sort of feature. I found a string of lights on sale.
Edit: It’s not obvious to the outside how these products work. The visible light emittance is not part of the EE kill functionality & therefore dissipates energy from the invisible wireless EE kill signal. Why does the signal matter? It’s in the IoT design of the root networks. They function as a kind of wireless bucket brigade passing energy in the direction of whatever is shouting “kill target here” in their coded language. Black rocks sensing wet &/or hair will shout. And some of the lights will shout with an active power source. In general, the plastic cover of most wire casings has been designed to participate in EE kill networks if current is present. So it wasn’t clear if the particular string of lights I got would work well in “off” mode. But it seems to work best in “off mode” – that’s a function of a covert design/placement motive. Evidently it’s the active/battery/solar powered unit that does the shouting while the light string is only sharing energy to somewhere else when lit.b) “Ice melt” for sub-zero freezing that is Calcium chloride or magnesium chloride (calcium preferred) contains a lot of negative ions that will discharge and also help to dig out roots in freezing conditions. Throw it at the problem spot & you get substantial, immediate, temporary relief until the ions are used up. This effect can be used in conjuntion with cheaper, slower acting products like lime pellets that will very slowly discharge negative ions over time.
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February 2, 2023 at 2:33 am #126213

Josh Stern
ModeratorIt turns out that some mfgs. offer both wireless pulse signals that draw the root attack towards them & wireless signals that direct it to stay away – go in the other direction if possible. These devices can be mfg’d without the irrelevant lights at low cost. For building construction, it can easily be put in all of the foundation outwalls. I would recommend an ability to issue the current “go away” signal in the walls & some future-proofing in terms of imagining how it might evolve if the old methods become well hacked.
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February 6, 2023 at 3:11 am #126249

Josh Stern
ModeratorTrends in EE kill tech that we are seeing over the past year:
1) More extensive & elaborate use of drones to add EEkill microwires & general destruction, visible & non-visible to the inner walls & interstitial spaces of buildings being attacked. The damage is large & also enables a lot more EE kill attack.
2) The micro-wires & roots themselves are becoming less electrically conductive and more purely responsive to covert IoT signaling. So they are harder to short circuit effectively, but more responsive to IoT go away signals or lures to travel to distant targets.
3) High frequency buzzing attack signal has been added to the incoming electrical attack from the utility. This couples with the IoT wiring already installed to create a painful attack. The older wires can been helped somewhat with deep grounding of the covering & vinyl tape covering, but really we need a circuit panel block of the incoming signal noise.
4) droids place special IoT electrical conducting/signaling dust that can look like cobwebs, deposited dust, or think spider webs.
These trends emphasize increasing need to commercial installations of protection that include various forms of tiny defense droid treament in the inner walls. They can fix the wires permanently and temporarily undo electrical work of attack droids. Fixing visible or structural damage is still a big issue, but publicity might help homeowners with insurance claims which they would otherwise not pay out – some sort of “prevent Martian mold damage…” (not the NatSec state as genocidal rectum cult killer super treason predator wacks)
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