Antisocial Behaviour

  • AsB: Its new orgins

    The ever-changing situation in the UK is an important course of study. It necessitates an interest because it helps us to learn more.

    It helps us to work better. It means we’re more insightful and more of a help to each other.

    This is the same with Antisocial Behaviour. It used to be before and during the World Wars that it constituted people mucking about, as it’s said.

    Now, today, it isn’t the same. It’s about more than that, and it’s taught now to public workers that this is now the case.

    New torture

    The primary driving force of Antisocial Behaviour is a new sort of torture activity that isn’t easily noticed in its first instance.

    It constitutes the abduction of someone who’s complained about a simple act of agitation, such as previously described by this site.

    The individual is then traumatised according to techniques drawn from the medical sciences.

    This is internal and the whole process is usually carried out without physical harm on the outside.

    The victim is then targeted for their assets, or their knowledge of UK life and culture. This is sold, used, or destroyed to create havoc. This is the sordid business of Antisocial Behaviour.

    The driving force

    It’s believed to be businesspeople and political figures that drive this sort of activity. They care little about human life and welfare.

    I’ve spoken to one political staffer who said he didn’t “care” that he was involved, and insisted he should only care about his own life.

    This is the sort of attitude that persists in these circles in London, and elsewhere in the world.

    It’s a dark, dirty, disgusting state of affairs that they create, and it only threatens to pockmark and destroy culture – and our lives.

    *A change was made to correct a spelling error.

  • AsB: The hidden reality

    The stark reality of Antisocial Behaviour is that most of it isn’t seen in public. It takes place in neighbourhoods and on estates where gangs takeover residences and run amok in houses.

    I’ve seen it before in two large cities in the UK. The house – or flat – is invaded by criminals. They ‘squat’ in the property. They take food, use washroom facilities, and sleep in any of the rooms it has. The occupier is left making do.

    This is a type of Antisocial Behaviour that people have most often complained about to me. “It happens to just about anyone,” a man said to me in Manchester, “it just comes, and then it goes.”

    The enforcement of it is rapid if it happens. It’s taken to Court. It’s dealt with in others ways, such as by health experts and support workers. This breaks up the group, and separates their problems into parts.

    The legacy is trauma. I’ve met people still frightened years after the events. They hate living here, and they distrust people. It’s understandable. The experience is horrible. The people are disgusting. It’s an offensive act.

    The targets are picked at random and its culprits are seemingly incapable of fitting into society. I’ve found groups living in forests because they can’t live beside others. I’ve found still more trying to bed it down in fields next to rail tracks.

    If the response is to enforce the law, it always works out. In fact, further attacks are unlikely. It’s just an idea, or a plan that people concoct in their head in a moment. It’s easy to put people off it, but we need to try to do it every single time.

  • AsB: Street crime

    The often used term Antisocial Behaviour is meant to cover a lot of instances of sights that many of us see on ordinary days. These are played out by individuals that look to have a mental disorder.

    After I took a look into this phenomena, I discovered more to it. Sure, the actions of such people have a mental component such as a disturbance of mind or an agitation in their physical self.

    Yet the process of ending up on a street somewhere – such as a town or a city near you – is actually driven by criminal activity. These people are preyed on in relatively good health and because of poverty.

    A suspected victim of AsB “Training” and a perpetrator alleged to be prepping for a target.

    It’s been linked to professionals in Number 10 and in the Civil Service, who use such instances to create excuses to visit citizens to steal large sums of cash, and assets. They’re nefarious types of people.

    The distraction is created by the victim who is trained by those active in business circles. They use behavioural techniques to break their sanity and to instil bodily movements that subversively communicate criminal accusations.

    The target is then visited in their home by fake Police staff who make the charges. The threats are levelled. The cash and assets disappear and no trace is left of the crime. It’s difficult to crack because of the numbers of people involved in it.

  • Caught: ASB criminal

    In an exclusive for Conservative News Site, a notorious ASB suspect believed to wreak havoc across Reading in neighbourhoods has been spotted.

    A local ASB suspect

    It’s believed he wanted to start a crime gang, but he was prohibited by an international crime team. His activities and movements are now monitored.

  • ASB erupts in Reading, Berkshire

    A young male was spotted acting up in Reading today. It’s believed he was part of the Territorial Army before joining a private security agency in communities.

    The trouble erupted against another male in the town. It’s not believed any physical harm was caused. The suspect’s behaviour shows psychological issues.

  • Army officers caught in Reading suburb

    In an exclusive for ConservativeNewsSite.com, a group of Army officers have been caught out in Battle Square, in a suburb of Reading, a town in Berkshire.

    Evidence

    Army officer’s seen walking

    It’s not clear which officers they are, although it’s a grey area if Army officers can be identified by name when assumed to be out on patrol.

    However, it’s clear they also shouldn’t be doing what they are seen doing, which is “embattling” a neighbourhood in order to launch a public relations offensive against the town itself.

    Reading has just emerged from a difficult period in its own history, and yet this group of officers sent themselves to damage its new-found reputation.

    It’s happens often in different parts of the country, and is still an ongoing investigation as to why, and how.

    Beliefs

    They have a belief in a “Global Economy”, and this drives manic parts of the British Army to launch their own offences overseas.

    These officers are likely to be part of this small group of radicals.

    They’ve got unique identifiers, such as “Signal”, “Follower”, and “Couple”, and “Chaser”, “Family”, and “Message” are also thought to be operational names.

    They plan their operations together and spread false information regarding their activities amongst people, particularly religious communities such as Christian groups.

    It’s not understood how dangerous they are, although they can be wily, as much of it is in the context of criminality. However, their mix of military terms has achieved them a measure of success.

    Their ultimate aim is called “Hard Criticism”, and it’s felt by those who do serious work serving the state, and the country.

    It’s often reflected on social media, and other user accounts.

  • What is “social threat” posting?

    It’s not a term yet accepted or used in the mainstream, but “social threat” posting is a relatively new phenomena that’s a combination of harassment and antisocial behaviour.

    It involves placing a threat somewhere online, most likely a social media site, and then “tagging” it with items or objects offline. It usually involves useful, everyday objects.

    The target is shown an image they don’t want to see, and later they’re reminded of it in a social setting. It may be in the street, or it could be at work the next day.

    I’ve found an example of a threat, and I’ve found the related objects in public places. According to this set up, the target was going to be approached, called a “cold turkey”.

  • Exclusive: “Bath Estate”

    It’s not easy making sense of the news, and at times it’s helpful the news makes sense of itself. It can be clear because a news anchor tells us what happened, and why it matters. It’s a straightforward approach to finding things out and making sense of it that matters.

    In looking at the state of England, it can be difficult to put the pieces together. This is because the information is slow to get through, and at times there’s so much of it. To put it together is a job in itself, and it requires time, effort, and patience.

    The mysteries that we feel exist here are in some part explained by a group called “Bath Estate”. It’s difficult to pinpoint – or trace – where they are because they’ve spread out in different ways. As we know, at a certain age people go off to Uni, or move to a different job.

    This group started off in a very close knit community, and was small at first. In Bath, an historic city in the south of the country, a small group of disparate youths began to organise together. It wasn’t a “collective” in a generic sense of the term, but more of a politically active gang.

    They eventually spread out across the country, and more groups were set up under different names. This one remained the principal agitator, and two members of it were seen in central London yesterday. It’s axiomatic what they do is disruptive and harmful to our way of life.

    A member of “Bath Estate” in London yesterday
    A member of “Bath Estate” leaving London yesterday

    A visit I made some years back to their “home base”, as they called it, resulted in a quick getaway. In the altercation a young person reached for a DIY tool and swung it in front of my face. It was a sign I had to leave because I knew they engaged in hostility at close quarters.

    Their involvement is also difficult – but not impossible – to trace, into protest marches and riots, and other demonstrations. They’re a violent group but had other wishes in mind and started to employ slogans as taunts and made threats online and in person too.

    The eventual harm done was minimal, in their case, but only because their activities were followed closely. Their antisocial behaviour was local in nature, following their tactic of “skirmishes” that began and ended quickly. It meant it was difficult to smash, but eventually it separated.

  • The state of our streets

    The reality of streets in the UK is plain for all to see. It’s a damaged bench. It’s a pile of litter left in a corner beside a wall. It’s a bit of dangerous material like broken glass or a syringe left over.

    It’s also in our way. It’s not in alleyways. I find it on high streets, in public parks, and along residential streets.

    Litter in Canary Wharf

    There’s a facet to antisocial behaviour that it’s meant to get in our way. The addiction is a cry for help but the antisocial behaviour we get isn’t about assistance.

    It’s all about a hatred of who we are. It’s about making a nuisance for us to clear up. It’s about a law that isn’t a law but an attitude that is meant to affront all of us.

  • Anderson tackles yobs

    Lee Anderson MP (Ashfield/Reform UK) spoke about knife crime in the House of Commons. He challenged Yvette Cooper, the Home Secretary, on what the government will do after efficient action against riots.

    “The amount of stabbings and deaths by stabbings in this country is reaching shocking levels. Over the past few weeks, the Home Secretary and the Prime Minister have fast-tracked the violent criminals in these riots, and got them into court and in prison within two weeks. Is it not about time that we did the same with these yobboes—these thugs—who are carrying knives?”

    In response Cooper said she’ll work to halve the offending rate, pointing out its increase and delays in the justice system. It’s a tough ask from Anderson and it looks to be a high bar set by the government.

  • Who are the Southport kids?

    The stabbing attack in Southport has rocked a nation.

    In short order riots led by agitator’s erupted in neighbourhoods and spread across the UK. The fact remains children were at the centre of the initial incident and not thugs on streets.

    Sadly three lives were lost and eight were injured alongside a few adults. The narrative so far is the UK is sinking into a far-right whirlpool of public disorder but an incident such as this warrants further comment about the age of its victims.

    The context is hardly enlightening. It’s the target themselves who are the point.

    The reasons for political agitation are part of a long-running dispute between street activists and journalistic personalities. The tit-for-tat is the usual tattle of a separate class.

    Yet this incident isn’t a likely occurrence in the UK.

    If it wasn’t to indulge a sadistic sort of rage that a young man has, why did a normal boy by all appearances seek to do it? The facts and stats about this young man’s life may yet reveal more about the steps he took to a horrible act.

    It still remains that children’s lives were lost in a terrible tragedy.

    The focus is on these and not yobbish behaviour.

  • Caught: Local agitator

    This man is suspected of creating local agitation over the course of many years. He was caught walking along a popular street in central Reading today.

    The focus of an investigation changes depending on circumstances or context. It’s necessary to catch long term suspects when it’s possible to do so.

  • Starmer gets tough on rioters

    Sir Keir Starmer has promised action after riots in the North of the country. The Prime Minister reacted to disturbances in Southport by announcing a National Violent Disorder Program for the UK.

    It will mean greater sharing of intelligence and resources between police forces. The use of facial recognition technology may also spread to further locations.