“It’s Your Behavior”: Control, Stalking, Micromanagement, and the Manufacture of a Human Cage

Posted: June 9, 2026 in Community Mobbing

Table of Contents

“It’s Your Behavior”: Control, Stalking, Micromanagement, and the Manufacture of a Human Cage

“It’s your behavior.”.

The Original Lie: “It’s Your Behavior”

“See? There is something wrong with him.”

The Foundation: Illegal Monitoring, Psychological Labeling, and the First Spark

“Why does Kevin think people are watching him?”

“Who created the original label, who distributed it, who monitored him, who protected the monitoring, and why did this begin when he was five years old?”

What Drives This Kind of Control?

Authority Direction and Protection

Stalking Is Not Concern

The Shock Collar, the Button, and the Psychology of Breaking a Human Being

“Do not ask who is pushing the button. And accept your demise”

Action-Reaction: The Healthier I Get, the More the Shocks Increase

This Is Not Imaginary: Psychology Has a History of Conditioning Living Beings

Ivan Pavlov and Classical Conditioning

John B. Watson, Rosalie Rayner, and Little Albert

Edward Thorndike and the Law of Effect

B. F. Skinner, Operant Conditioning, and the Skinner Box

Martin Seligman, Steven Maier, and Learned Helplessness

Harry Harlow and Isolation

Wendell Johnson, Mary Tudor, and the Monster Study

MKULTRA and Behavioral Modification

The Abuse of Psychological Authority

The Dinner-Table Diagnosis

Black-and-White Judgment: Making Normal Life Impossible

“See? Something is wrong with him.”

It only needs to reinterpret every ordinary thing as wrong

Walking Away Becomes “Paranoia”

Unaddressable Provocation: Designed So It Cannot Be Reasoned With

“See? He is paranoid.”

“See? I told you so.”

The Therapist as Confession Booth

The Echo Chamber of Guilt

When One Label Fails, the System Changes Costumes

Manufactured Dangerousness

Special Schools, Special Classes, and Early Profiling

From Family Labeling to Institutional Machinery

The Website, the Paper Trail, and the Fear of Proof

Police, Private Security, and Public Removal Systems

How Would Everyone Know? The Mechanics of Spread

How Does It Become Every Public Place?

The Forest Fire of Defamation.

Forced Migration and the Planned Point of Awareness

Permission to Hurt

The Reverse Accusation

The Historical Pattern: Surveillance, Discrediting, and Psychiatric Control

Government-Style Operations and the Question of Motive

When Exposure Becomes the Real Threat

What kind of system does this to a child?

Engineered Self-Destruction as a Disappearance Method

Fear-Mongering the Crowd

Dissemination: Turning Every Fragment Into Public Shame

The Impossibility of Cure for a Fake Problem

The Moral Inversion

From Animal Experiments to Human Social Control

Why Start With a Five-Year-Old?

The Family Psychology Behind the Machine

The Purpose of Never Stopping

The Constitutional Question

The Question They Cannot Allow

The Real Definition

control through micromanagement, expanded into a privately manufactured psychiatric smear, then amplified into authority-directed social and institutional eradication

The Final Point

“It’s Your Behavior”: Control, Stalking, Micromanagement, and the Manufacture of a Human Cage

The phrase always sounds simple:

“It’s your behavior.”

That is the magic phrase. That is the cover phrase. That is the phrase used to make stalking sound like observation, provocation sound like concern, and psychological abuse sound like accountability.

But the phrase hides the real emotion underneath the system.

Fear.

Hatred.

Insecurity.

Shame.

Superiority.

The need to dominate.

When someone follows you around, collects private details, analyzes every blink, every reaction, every mistake, every social interaction, every date, every job, every public moment, and then twists all of it into something ugly, that is not concern.

That is not help.

That is not mental health.

That is control driven by hostility.

And when that control is aimed at removing a person from normal life, it becomes eradication.

Not necessarily eradication only in the physical sense.

There are many ways to make a person disappear.

You can destroy his reputation.

You can poison his relationships.

You can isolate him.

You can provoke him.

You can humiliate him.

You can make him afraid to speak.

You can make him afraid to date.

You can make him afraid to work.

You can make him afraid to exist in public.

You can make him look unstable after years of pressure.

You can try to push him toward jail, psychiatric confinement, social exile, self-destruction, or total credibility destruction.

Then you can call the entire process “concern.”

That is the trick.

That is the machine.

The Original Lie: “It’s Your Behavior”

The original issue is not behavior.

The original issue is interpretation.

A person can take anything and make it look like something else if they already decided the conclusion before the facts.

A child smiles wrong.

A child blinks wrong.

A child kisses someone on the playground.

A child gets scared.

A child gets angry.

A child does not understand adult games.

A child reacts to pressure.

Then adults say:

“See? There is something wrong with him.”

That is not diagnosis.

That is projection.

That is especially true when the child is five years old.

A five-year-old does not have a political agenda. A five-year-old does not have a criminal identity. A five-year-old does not have a developed personality that justifies lifelong punishment, surveillance, ridicule, and social destruction.

So when adults start in on a five-year-old with constant micromanagement, psychological interpretation, control, shame, and labels, the problem is not the five-year-old.

The problem is the adults.

The child has not even had time to become the accusation.

The accusation comes first.

The label comes first.

The interpretation comes first.

Then the adults spend years trying to collect enough fragments to make the label look true.

That is not concern.

That is a project.

The Foundation: Illegal Monitoring, Psychological Labeling, and the First Spark

The foundation of this entire pattern is not one argument, one misunderstanding, one bad friendship, one police report, one website, one car group, one coffee shop, one gym, one pool hall, one college, one teacher, or one public conflict.

The foundation is the original monitoring and labeling system.

In my account, this began when I was a child, around 1977, when I was five years old. It began inside a psychology-connected family and was then amplified through schools, police, community members, government-connected resources, and eventually the internet.

My mother, Anita Perlman, had a psychology background and worked as an art therapist at Cedars-Sinai. My father, Ron Perlman, is an orthopedic surgeon with a secondary psychology college background. My brother, Jason Perlman, also has medical training and psychology-related college background.

This matters because the original label did not come from nowhere. It came from a family that had enough psychological language to create a pseudo-clinical story, but not the ethical structure of a real clinical process.

This was not a neutral diagnosis.

This was not a proper psychiatric evaluation.

This was not an office-based treatment relationship.

This was not a child being helped.

This was a family-originated label that allegedly became the basis for illegal monitoring, interpretation, and social control.

The allegation is that illegal police monitoring and psychology-community monitoring were established at a very young age to watch, collect, interpret, and twist ordinary behavior. Whether this began at the police level, or involved higher government resources, intelligence-style resources, or NSA-level capabilities, I cannot state with certainty. But the scale, duration, repetition, and reach suggest resources far beyond ordinary family gossip.

That is the foundation.

A child is labeled.

The child is watched.

The child is interpreted.

Teachers are brought in.

Schools are brought in.

Friends are brought in.

Police-connected people are brought in.

Psychology-connected people are brought in.

Government-connected resources are brought in.

Then every ordinary behavior becomes material.

That is how the first spark becomes a forest fire.

Once a child is labeled as “special,” “unstable,” “crazy,” “dangerous,” or “unknown,” that label can travel. It can be softened for public use. It can be disguised as concern. It can be repeated as a warning. It can be handed from one adult to another, one school to another, one social group to another, one police contact to another.

The wording may sound innocent:

“Kevin is special.”

“Kevin needs to be watched.”

“Kevin has problems.”

“Kevin may react.”

“Kevin needs help.”

“Pay attention to his behavior.”

“Do these things and see how he responds.”

But underneath the soft language is the operating system:

Monitor him.

Test him.

Provoke him.

Collect on him.

Interpret him.

Make the label come true.

That is why this is so dangerous.

A rumor can fade.

A family conflict can end.

A bad friendship can be walked away from.

But an authority-backed label can grow beyond the people who first created it. It can become institutional. It can become automatic. It can become a script that people repeat without knowing where it began.

That is how the forest fire spreads.

Anita Perlman and Ron Perelman creates the psychological narrative.

Jason Perlman helps spread or operationalize it.

Michael Patrick Huntley later appears as part of the social trap.

Paul Humphrey, who worked for LAPD in 1998, appears as part of the police-connected social environment emerging with Mike Huntley in 1986.

Rhody Morales appears in the alleged 2001 setup environment.

Tom Farley appears as an early childhood social actor.

Ms. Vaughn appears as an example of a school actor.

Jen Hess appears as an example of a later internet-era setup context.

Teachers, school officials, professors, police-connected actors, psychology-connected people, judicial actors, community members, and public groups all become part of the expanding relay.

The names matter because this is not an abstract theory.

This is a timeline.

This is a chain.

This is the alleged path from family labeling to institutional machinery.

By the time the pattern reaches adulthood, the original child has been surrounded by decades of interpretation. Every new person is told there is “history.” Every new place receives the warning. Every new interaction is filtered through the label.

Then, when the target finally begins to understand and speak, the system calls his speech the problem.

That is why they do not want me having an opinion about this to any human being on planet Earth.

Because if the foundation is examined, the story changes.

The question is no longer:

“Why does Kevin think people are watching him?”

The question becomes:

“Who created the original label, who distributed it, who monitored him, who protected the monitoring, and why did this begin when he was five years old?”

That is the question that damages the cover story.

It damages the family story.

It damages the police story.

It damages the psychology story.

It damages the judicial story.

It damages the government story.

Because if a psychology-connected family can use police, school, judicial, and government-connected resources to label, monitor, and psychologically attack a child, then this is no longer a private family issue.

It is a civil-rights issue.

It is a constitutional issue.

It is a government-abuse issue.

It is a warning to every parent, every child, every citizen, and every person who believes the United States is supposed to protect people from exactly this kind of unchecked power.

This is why the foundation matters.

The later mobs did not create the story.

The internet did not create the story.

The website did not create the story.

My police reports did not create the story.

The public conflicts did not create the story.

The foundation came first.

The label came first.

The monitoring came first.

The script came first.

The later events are the branches of the same tree.

And the tree was planted when I was a child.

What Drives This Kind of Control?

Control is the method.

But control is not the deepest motive.

Control is usually driven by something underneath it: fear, hatred, insecurity, shame, envy, superiority, and the need to dominate what the controller cannot understand or tolerate.

Normal people can dislike someone and walk away.

Normal people can be afraid and still respect the law.

Normal people can disagree and still leave another human being alone.

Normal people do not spend decades stalking, provoking, humiliating, labeling, isolating, and trying to force another person into a cage while calling it “help.”

That kind of conduct comes from something darker.

It comes from the kind of personality that believes its fear is more important than another person’s rights.

It comes from the kind of person who believes their discomfort gives them permission to destroy someone else’s life.

It comes from people who confuse authority with morality.

It comes from people who believe that because they have education, money, status, medical language, psychology language, police contacts, judicial connections, government influence, or social power, they have the right to define another person as defective, dangerous, or disposable.

That is not concern.

That is hatred wearing a professional mask.

And the most dangerous kind of hatred is the kind that does not recognize itself as hatred.

It says:

“We are worried.”

“We are helping.”

“He has a problem.”

“It is his behavior.”

“He needs treatment.”

“He needs supervision.”

“He needs to be controlled.”

But underneath those words is the real message:

“We are afraid of him.”

“We are ashamed of him.”

“We do not want him free.”

“We do not want him believed.”

“We do not want him to have a normal life.”

“We want him removed.”

That is why the emotional core has to be named.

The people capable of doing this are not simply “controlling.” They are morally dangerous. They may look respectable. They may have degrees. They may go to temple. They may speak the language of compassion. They may call themselves parents, doctors, helpers, teachers, police officers, professionals, or concerned citizens.

But conduct reveals character.

If a person uses psychological language to inflict pain, that person is not acting as a healer.

If a person uses fear to justify cruelty, that person is not acting as a protector.

If a person uses social power to isolate someone, that person is not acting out of love.

If a person manufactures false labels to remove someone from society, that person is not correcting behavior.

That person is participating in dehumanization.

That is the word.

Dehumanization is what allows people to do unspeakable things while telling themselves they are good.

It is how someone stops seeing a child as a child and starts seeing him as a problem.

It is how someone stops seeing a human being as a human being and starts seeing him as a case, a threat, a diagnosis, a burden, a stain, a liability, or a thing to be managed.

Once that happens, cruelty becomes easy.

The person is no longer treated as someone with a soul, rights, privacy, dignity, and the right to live freely.

The person becomes an object.

A project.

A suspect.

A specimen.

A dog with a shock collar.

A child in a human Skinner box.

That is why “control” is not enough.

This is control powered by fear and hatred.

This is domination powered by insecurity.

This is psychological violence disguised as concern.

This is the personality structure behind the machine: people who cannot tolerate another person’s freedom, so they create a moral excuse to destroy it.

Authority Direction and Protection

In my allegation, this is not random private citizens acting alone, and it is not merely authority figures looking the other way.

They are doing both.

They have directed it, and they continue protecting it.

Police, psychology-connected people, teachers, school officials, government employees, judicial actors, and institutional figures have allegedly supplied the label, the tactics, the permission, and the immunity.

The message is simple:

“This is Kevin Perlman.”

“This is how you interpret him.”

“These are the tactics.”

“Do these things to him.”

“If he reacts, use the reaction.”

“If he complains, call it paranoia.”

“If he documents, call it obsession.”

“If he asks why, call it mental illness.”

“Nothing will happen to you.”

That is the missing authority layer.

The crowd does the daily shocking.

The authority figures provide the script and the shield.

That is why the behavior keeps spreading. Random people do not invent the same psychological tactics for decades by accident. They are given the frame, the target, the themes, and the permission.

Then, once the tactics spread, the same institutions continue protecting the participants by ignoring reports, refusing evidence, twisting complaints, and turning the focus back onto Kevin Perlman’s reaction.

That is how the machine works:

Direct the tactic.

Protect the actor.

Collect the reaction.

Call the reaction proof.

Repeat.

This is not over.

This is not an old family story.

This is past and present conduct: a continuing system of labeling, provocation, psychological shocks, public humiliation, and institutional protection.

That is not concern.

That is authority-directed social eradication.

Stalking Is Not Concern

Concern has a shape.

Concern asks questions.

Concern protects dignity.

Concern preserves rights.

Concern wants the person to live better.

Concern does not destroy the person’s name.

Concern does not poison every relationship.

Concern does not use strangers to provoke reactions.

Concern does not collect private details and twist them into fictional stories.

Stalking has a different shape.

Stalking watches.

Stalking follows.

Stalking collects.

Stalking interprets.

Stalking waits for mistakes.

Stalking creates pressure.

Stalking turns reactions into evidence.

So when someone says, “We are only concerned,” but their conduct is stalking, provocation, defamation, isolation, and threats, then the words do not matter.

The conduct defines the motive.

And the conduct is not concern.

The Shock Collar, the Button, and the Psychology of Breaking a Human Being

There is one family example that explains the entire system.

When I was younger, my father had a Rhodesian Ridgeback dog named Rhoda. He did not want the dog going into the kitchen when the family was eating. Instead of ordinary communication, patience, humane training, or basic boundary-setting, he used a shock collar. Eventually, that progressed into a perimeter shock collar with a remote button.

That matters because it reveals a philosophy of control.

When the subject does not behave the way the controller wants, the controller inflicts pain.

The point is not communication.

The point is compliance.

The message is not, “Let me teach you.”

The message is, “I will hurt you until you stop.”

But the deeper question is this:

What happens when the button never stops?

What happens when the dog leaves the kitchen, and the shock still comes?

What happens when the child behaves, and the shock still comes?

What happens when the adult goes to school, goes to work, goes to the gym, takes a walk, dates someone, avoids conflict, makes art, builds websites, tries to be friendly, tries to be healthy, tries to walk away, tries to live a normal life — and the shock still comes?

Then it is no longer correction.

It is torture.

That is the human shock collar.

A person is not wearing a device around his neck. The device is social. The device is psychological. The device is public. The device is made of people, repetition, humiliation, provocation, and psychological terror tactics.

A stranger repeats private information.

Shock.

A friend reports back to the family.

Shock.

A teacher watches differently.

Shock.

A date becomes a false story.

Shock.

A public place becomes a stage.

Shock.

A police officer makes a threat.

Shock.

Someone hints at a family lie.

Shock.

Someone laughs while pretending nothing is happening.

Shock.

Someone says, “It’s your behavior.”

Shock.

And once the system becomes public, the shocks are no longer isolated. They become environmental. They become repetitive. They become person-to-person, place-to-place, day-to-day pressure.

In public places, person after person mimics the same behavior directed at me based on collected aspects of my private life.

Shock.

Random strangers walk past me whistling from place to place.

Shock.

Employees are told to mimic my sayings, jokes, phrases, or social-network references.

Shock.

People are allegedly told that if they see me and are near me, they should start tapping their feet, tapping counters, or repeating small physical gestures.

Shock.

Groups of neighbors come outside in matching colors, or in colors matching the clothing I am wearing.

Shock.

Cars are parked in patterns: two or more white cars together, pairs of cars, cars backed into parking spaces, or other repeated visual arrangements directed at me.

Shock.

When I buy something with a credit card, employees at locations worldwide are allegedly told to tap the card twice on the counter before handing it back.

Shock.

Previous private conversations are hinted at by strangers, one person after another.

Shock.

Repetition tactics appear person to person: people repeatedly calling me “man,” “boss,” or “bro,” or incorporating trigger words into sentences in unnatural numbers from day to day.

Shock.

People repeat things in twos or threes near me, rotating through large groups. At a car event, coffee shop, or public location, this can happen fifteen times in an hour, from stranger to stranger.

Shock.

Websites I surf or topics I privately read are hinted about the next day through idea-of-reference-style messages.

Shock.

People befriend me and bring up Illuminati, aliens, conspiracy theories, or other loaded subjects to try to make me look unstable, paranoid, or crazy.

Shock.

Women call me a stalker when they do not get what they want, or when a situation is being staged to create the appearance that I am unsafe around women.

Shock.

Positive things that could lead to friends, relationships, human connection, or public participation are accused of being “attention seeking,” so I am not allowed to ask out women, have friends, or participate normally in social environments.

Shock.

Any personal expression, emotion, originality, passion, humor, warmth, or creativity is labeled crazy, weird, obsessive, or suspicious.

Shock.

Anything done more than once is labeled obsession.

Shock.

Trying to have a normal friendly conversation with another person, with no motive other than human connection or shared interest, becomes something to punish, twist, or analyze.

Shock.

Trying to sit down and relax in public — at restaurants, coffee shops, parks, in my car, or almost anywhere with people — becomes another opportunity for harassment: whistling, verbal abuse, “man,” “boss,” “bro,” fragmented conversation collection, obsessive looping, mockery, guilt tactics, and private-life references passed from place to place.

Shock.

Any time I leave my house to get fresh air, focus on my health, or simply do something normal, the system creates pressure.

Shock.

Statements about loitering, trespass, vagrancy, or homelessness are used at places where people normally relax or return more than once, such as Starbucks — even when I arrive in a $90,000 Jaguar XKR.

Shock.

If I buy a car, any car, even a cheap twenty-year-old used Mitsubishi Eclipse, the narrative becomes that Kevin is a car thief, Kevin should not buy cars, or Kevin needs tickets, arrests, or registration accusations.

Shock.

Almost anything involving “more than one” becomes suspicious: owning more than one car, asking more than one woman out after the first was not interested, doing more than one photo shoot, going to more than one public location, trying a different coffee shop after being harassed at the first one, or returning to the same restaurant more than once.

Shock.

Smoking cigars becomes another setup. I am asked how many cigars I smoke. Then people play victim about their lungs. Then I am harassed anywhere I smoke a cigar, even in cigar lounges or places where cigars are sold.

Shock.

If I go to a gym on a normal routine, it is called obsession. If I stop going for a couple of weeks, it is framed as guilt, paranoia, or evidence that something happened.

Shock.

Someone may approach me and ask about my life. When I begin to answer, they walk away whistling, hinting cryptically that I am a “whistleblower” or that I said too much. Then the provocations increase for an hour, a month, or even years, as punishment for speaking.

Shock.

Threats follow: “You had better accept what’s going on, or it will get a lot worse.”

Shock.

After Roddy Morales took me to strip clubs with Michael Patrick Huntley and LAPD-connected actors, and after I refused the alleged attempt to bring LAPD-confiscated marijuana into my house to frame me as a drug dealer, I told Roddy I did not want him in my life because he was involved in things that could endanger or destroy my life. The response became more threats, more escalation, and more warnings that if I went to clubs, things would get a thousand times worse.

Shock.

If I play pool, the story becomes that I play too much pool, that I am not wanted at that pool hall, or any pool hall, while waitresses or women are used to create stalking accusations, harassment, or reaction traps.

Shock.

If I get into photography, the story becomes that I am not allowed to take pictures of people.

Shock.

At the University of Colorado in 1996, during a college photography class, Jason Perlman’s friend Mike Wexler allegedly pushed a “road trip” scenario while warning, “You’re not allowed to take pictures of people,” creating threat-like pressure and group retaliation around my interest in photography.

Shock.

When I got into studio photography around 2005, Aubrey Fisher, Roddy Morales, LAPD-connected actors, and a West Valley officer calling himself Officer Toro allegedly created a new wave of threats, including statements such as, “If you ever get into photography, I will exercise the law in my own way.”

Shock.

Artwork and photography then became another trap. Any piece of art, image, theme, emotion, symbolism, or creative expression could be reframed as confession, mental illness, schizophrenia, danger, or guilt.

Shock.

As an artist, this is especially important. My mother, Anita Perlman, worked as an art therapist at Cedars-Sinai. In my account, that made art one of the earliest and most dangerous areas of projection. Instead of seeing art as expression, imagination, symbolism, or creativity, the system treats it as evidence.

Shock.

Any artwork becomes a confession.

Shock.

Any symbol becomes guilt.

Shock.

Any emotional expression becomes instability.

Shock.

Any originality becomes obsession.

Shock.

Any image becomes pathology.

Shock.

Any creative life becomes another way to punish me.

Shock.

Any aspect of normal human emotion — dating, flirting, jokes, warmth, kindness, affection, curiosity, or even childhood moments like kissing a Black girl when I was young — becomes material for accusation, anger, cry-wolf tactics, and increased mobbing.

Shock.

Any friendly, warm, joking personality toward business employees or people in public places is met with cryptic terror tactics designed to stop bonding at every level.

Shock.

Even professional friendliness is punished. I am expected to stand or sit like a soldier, say only “yes,” “no,” or “I’ll have this,” and remove all warmth, humor, personality, and connection from public life.

Shock.

That is how total isolation is manufactured.

Shock.

If I speak, I am weird.

Shock.

If I am friendly, I am harassing.

Shock.

If I am warm, I am suspicious.

Shock.

If I joke, I am unstable.

Shock.

If I express emotion, I am dangerous.

Shock.

Any verbal dialogue becomes angular and manipulative. Conversations are not allowed to be honest or direct. They become attempts to get something from me, make me agree to something, make me look crazy, trigger a reaction, create a false confession, or steal money.

Shock.

Projection games follow: “You can’t see yourself, so we are showing you who you are.” “Go to a therapist and tell them everything.” “If you do not give the coerced false confession we want, we will never stop.” But if I do give them anything, it becomes the excuse to punish me in a double bind.

Shock.

If I say these things are being done to my life, the response becomes: “You’re lying.” “You want attention.” “We do not believe you.”

Shock.

Then the same behavior is repeated harder.

Shock.

Any attempt to ask what is going on, why they are doing it, why they will not stop, or who is directing it is met with more punishment — especially from the psychology community, police, neighborhood-watch groups, security companies, lawyers, judicial employees, clerks, and public actors.

Shock.

Every few minutes, push the button.

If the person reacts, call the reaction proof.

If the person does not react, push harder.

If the person walks away, follow.

If the person asks why, punish the question.

That is the most important part.

A normal human being who is being shocked will eventually ask why.

Why are you doing this?

Why will you not stop?

What did I do?

What is this about?

Why are strangers involved?

Why is every healthy behavior attacked?

Why am I being followed?

Why am I being provoked?

Why do strangers know of me and lash out in anger and rage wherever I go?

Why is my life being treated like evidence?

Why is my existence being punished by people who claim to like me, and by angry anonymous strangers from every circle?

Those are normal questions.

Those are human questions.

But in this system, the question itself becomes the crime.

The person is not only punished for behavior.

The person is punished for noticing.

The person is punished for asking.

The person is punished for wanting the pain, provocations, harassment, and isolation to stop.

That reveals the real rule.

The rule is not:

“Fix your behavior.”

The real rule is:

“Do not ask who is pushing the button.”

That is why the phrase “it’s your behavior” is so dishonest.

The behavior is not being observed in freedom.

The behavior is being shaped under duress.

The family presses the button, creates distress, erases the button, and calls the distress proof.

The system creates pressure, captures the reaction, removes the context, and calls the reaction mental illness.

Ask why the pressure exists, and the pressure gets worse.

Ask why the shocks will not stop, and they shock harder.

Ask why people are doing this, and they call the question paranoia.

Ask why strangers are repeating the same themes, and they call the noticing schizophrenia.

Ask why healthy behavior is being attacked, and they call the resistance obsession.

That is not psychology.

That is psychological domination.

It is not treatment.

It is not concern.

It is the remote button being pushed over and over again — except now the collar is made out of people.

“Do not ask who is pushing the button. And accept your demise”

That is why the phrase “it’s your behavior” is so dishonest. The behavior is not being observed in freedom. The behavior is being shaped under duress.

The family presses the button, creates distress, erases the button, and calls the distress proof.

The system creates pressure, captures the reaction, removes the context, and calls the reaction mental illness.

Ask why the pressure exists, and the pressure gets worse.

Ask why the shocks will not stop, and they shock harder.

Ask why people are doing this, and they call the question paranoia.

Ask why strangers are repeating the same themes, and they call the noticing schizophrenia.

Ask why healthy behavior is being attacked, and they call the resistance obsession.

That is not psychology.

That is psychological domination.

Action-Reaction: The Healthier I Get, the More the Shocks Increase

Another major part of the pattern is action-reaction.

The shocks do not increase when I am doing something harmful.

They increase when I am doing something healthy.

The more productive I become, the more the shocks increase.

The more I try to accomplish, the more the shocks increase.

The more I go outside, the more the shocks increase.

The more I go to the gym, the more the shocks increase.

The more I take walks, the more the shocks increase.

The more I work, create, build, document, socialize, or improve my life, the more the shocks increase.

That exposes the motive.

If the purpose were health, healthy behavior would be supported.

If the purpose were stability, stable behavior would be supported.

If the purpose were treatment, improvement would reduce the pressure.

But the opposite happens.

Improvement is punished.

Health is punished.

Productivity is punished.

Confidence is punished.

Documentation is punished.

Medication improvement is punished.

If medication helps someone function better, and the system responds by increasing provocation, then the system is not trying to help the person stabilize. It is trying to destroy the stabilization.

That is the action-reaction proof.

The system reacts against progress because progress disproves the label.

The healthier the target becomes, the more the target threatens the story.

So the system shocks harder.

This is not correction.

This is anti-health.

This is not treatment.

This is deterioration pressure.

This is a campaign to weaken the person’s strength, weaken his confidence, weaken his peace, weaken his social life, weaken his mental state, and weaken his ability to continue existing outside the label.

That is why the Stasi concept of Zersetzung matters as a historical parallel. Zersetzung was not only about physical force. It was about decomposition: breaking down a person’s life, relationships, confidence, reputation, and ability to function.

That is the logic here.

Do not let him get healthier.

Do not let him get stronger.

Do not let him get clearer.

Do not let him get proof.

Do not let him recover.

Do not let him live normally.

Shock the progress.

Punish the health.

Attack the strength.

Then call the damage proof that the original label was true.

This Is Not Imaginary: Psychology Has a History of Conditioning Living Beings

The public often hears words like “psychology,” “therapy,” “treatment,” or “behavior modification” and assumes the goal is always benevolent.

But the history of psychology is much more complicated.

Psychology has an entire history built around conditioning, punishment, reward, fear, deprivation, isolation, and behavior modification. These ideas were studied on animals. They were studied on children. They were studied in controlled environments. Some experiments became famous. Some became infamous. Some are now remembered as examples of what happens when human beings or animals are treated as subjects to be shaped instead of lives to be protected.

That is why this matters.

When I describe a human being being psychologically “shocked” through repeated provocation, humiliation, fear, social punishment, false accusation, and public pressure, I am not inventing the concept of behavior being shaped through pain.

That concept already exists.

Ivan Pavlov and Classical Conditioning

Ivan Pavlov’s work with dogs helped establish classical conditioning.

Pavlov showed that dogs could learn to associate a neutral stimulus, such as a bell or tone, with food. Eventually, the sound itself could produce salivation.

The important point is association.

A neutral thing becomes emotionally or physically meaningful because it is repeatedly paired with another stimulus.

That matters because a person can be conditioned to react to places, phrases, looks, sounds, people, symbols, movie references, private details, or social situations if those things are repeatedly paired with fear, humiliation, threat, or punishment.

The kitchen is no longer just a kitchen.

A public place is no longer just a public place.

A stranger’s phrase is no longer just a phrase.

A movie reference is no longer just a movie reference.

If the same types of signals are repeatedly paired with punishment, the body starts learning danger.

That is conditioning.

John B. Watson, Rosalie Rayner, and Little Albert

In 1920, John B. Watson and Rosalie Rayner conducted the famous Little Albert experiment.

They took a young child and paired a white rat with a loud, frightening noise. Over time, the child showed fear toward the rat even without the noise, and the fear reportedly generalized to other similar objects.

This is one of the most disturbing examples because it involved a child.

The experiment showed that fear could be conditioned.

That is the key point.

A child can be made afraid of something that was not originally frightening if adults repeatedly pair it with fear.

So when people pretend psychological conditioning is fantasy, history says otherwise. Psychology itself demonstrated that fear can be manufactured.

That is why the Little Albert experiment matters here.

It shows that adults in the field of psychology were willing to create fear in a child and then study the result.

That is not a wild accusation about human nature.

That is history.

Edward Thorndike and the Law of Effect

Edward Thorndike’s puzzle-box experiments with animals helped develop the Law of Effect.

The basic idea was that behaviors followed by satisfying consequences are more likely to be repeated, while behaviors followed by unpleasant consequences are less likely to be repeated.

That became one of the foundations for later behaviorism.

In plain English:

Reward something, and it may increase.

Punish something, and it may decrease.

This is the logic behind training.

But it is also the logic behind abuse.

If someone punishes a person for asking questions, the goal may be to stop the questions.

If someone punishes a person for speaking, the goal may be silence.

If someone punishes a person for dating, working, walking, creating, socializing, or trying to be healthy, the goal may be to make normal life feel unsafe.

That is not treatment.

That is coercion.

B. F. Skinner, Operant Conditioning, and the Skinner Box

B. F. Skinner developed operant conditioning into one of the major systems of behavioral psychology.

Operant conditioning focuses on how behavior is shaped by consequences.

Skinner’s operant chamber, commonly called the Skinner box, was a controlled experimental environment used to study animal behavior. An animal could press a lever and receive food. Behavior could be increased or decreased depending on what consequence followed.

The key terms matter.

Positive reinforcement means adding something desirable to increase behavior.

Negative reinforcement means removing something unpleasant to increase behavior.

Positive punishment means adding something unpleasant to decrease behavior.

Negative punishment means removing something desirable to decrease behavior.

This is important because the public often misunderstands the word “negative.” Negative reinforcement does not mean punishment. It means removing something unpleasant so a behavior increases.

But punishment is different. Punishment is about reducing behavior through unpleasant consequences or loss.

The larger point is that behavior can be shaped by controlling consequences.

That is where the abuse potential becomes obvious.

If a person’s entire social environment is turned into a punishment chamber, then ordinary life becomes the box.

The person goes to the gym.

Punishment.

The person takes a walk.

Punishment.

The person makes a friend.

Punishment.

The person dates.

Punishment.

The person asks why.

Punishment.

The person tries to expose the pattern.

More punishment.

That is the human Skinner box.

Not because there is a literal laboratory cage, but because the environment is being manipulated to produce, suppress, or punish behavior.

In this model, the person is not being treated.

The person is being conditioned.

And the most important conditioning is this:

Do not ask why.

Do not expose the family.

Do not challenge the label.

Do not talk about the shocks.

Do not tell people who is pushing the button.

Martin Seligman, Steven Maier, and Learned Helplessness

Martin Seligman and Steven Maier’s learned helplessness research involved animals exposed to uncontrollable aversive events, including shocks.

The central idea was that when a subject experiences that nothing it does changes the outcome, it may stop trying to escape.

That is why “the button never stops” matters.

If the shock stops when the person changes behavior, then the system is at least pretending to correct behavior.

But if the shock continues no matter what the person does, then the lesson becomes:

Nothing you do matters.

You cannot escape.

You cannot explain.

You cannot win.

You cannot make it stop.

That is not correction.

That is psychological destruction.

This is why the question “Why won’t you stop?” becomes so important.

The subject keeps asking because asking is human.

Please stop.

Why are you doing this?

What do you want?

What did I do?

But the system punishes the question.

That creates a deeper helplessness.

The person is not only trapped by the shocks.

The person is trapped by the rule that he is not allowed to identify the shocks.

Harry Harlow and Isolation

Harry Harlow’s monkey experiments are another disturbing part of psychology’s history.

Harlow’s work with infant rhesus monkeys showed the importance of comfort and attachment, but some of his experiments involved deprivation and isolation that caused severe emotional harm.

That matters because isolation is not neutral.

Being cut off from normal human connection is not harmless.

If a person is followed, smeared, publicly provoked, blocked from ordinary friendships, blocked from dating, blocked from trust, blocked from peace, and blocked from belonging, the harm is not imaginary.

Isolation itself becomes part of the punishment.

A human being is not built to live under permanent social exile.

So when a system poisons relationships, turns friends into collectors, turns dates into traps, and turns public life into provocation, that is not “concern.”

That is social deprivation.

It is the use of isolation as a weapon.

Wendell Johnson, Mary Tudor, and the Monster Study

The Monster Study, conducted in 1939 by Mary Tudor under Wendell Johnson’s supervision, involved children and speech-related labeling.

Some children were reportedly given negative feedback about their speech. The study is now widely discussed as ethically disturbing because vulnerable children were exposed to harmful labeling and criticism.

The important point is labeling.

A child can be harmed by being told something is wrong with him.

A child can be shaped by repeated negative interpretation.

A child can internalize or suffer under an adult’s label.

So when a family uses psychological-sounding labels against a child outside any legitimate clinical setting, that is not harmless.

Labels can injure.

Labels can become cages.

Labels can create the very distress later used as “evidence.”

A child does not have to be clinically ill for adults to damage him with a label.

The label itself can become the weapon.

MKULTRA and Behavioral Modification

This is not only about university psychology.

The United States Senate held hearings on Project MKULTRA, described as the CIA’s program of research in behavioral modification.

That phrase matters:

Behavioral modification.

The government itself investigated programs involving covert research into influencing, modifying, or controlling human behavior.

That does not prove every individual case.

But it proves the category exists.

Behavioral control was not science fiction.

It was studied, funded, hidden, and later exposed.

That is why people should be careful before dismissing claims about behavioral control, psychological pressure, or institutional misuse of mental-health language as impossible.

The historical record already shows that governments and institutions have studied ways to influence, manipulate, modify, and control human beings.

The question is not whether the idea exists.

The question is how those ideas are used, who uses them, and whether they are being used ethically or abusively.

The Abuse of Psychological Authority

Psychological knowledge can help people.

It can also be abused.

It can be used to understand trauma.

It can also be used to create trauma.

It can be used to reduce fear.

It can also be used to manufacture fear.

It can be used to support children.

It can also be used to label children.

It can be used to treat suffering.

It can also be used to create suffering and then call the suffering proof.

That is the point.

A person with psychological language is not automatically safe.

A person with a psychology degree is not automatically ethical.

A family member with psychological vocabulary is not a neutral clinician.

A dinner table is not a treatment room.

A rumor is not a diagnosis.

A private citizen collecting reactions is not a therapist.

A teacher repeating a family label is not a doctor.

A date fabricating a story is not a clinical witness.

A police officer acting on poisoned information is not a psychiatrist.

A person using psychological labels to control, punish, shame, isolate, or remove someone is not practicing care.

They are weaponizing psychology.

The Dinner-Table Diagnosis

One of the most important facts is that there was never a legitimate clinical foundation for these labels.

This was not a proper psychiatric evaluation. This was not a neutral clinical setting. This was not an ethical treatment relationship. This was not a licensed psychiatrist conducting a proper diagnosis with consent, records, standards, and accountability.

This was family labeling.

This was dinner-table psychoanalysis.

This was family members with psychology-related backgrounds using the aura of psychology without the ethics of psychology.

A mother with an art-therapy and psychology background.

A father who was an orthopedic surgeon with secondary psychology background.

A brother with medical training and secondary psychology background.

That is not the same thing as legitimate psychiatric diagnosis.

A family dinner table is not a clinic.

A family rumor is not a medical record.

A parent’s interpretation is not a diagnosis.

A brother’s lie is not evidence.

A friend reporting back to the family is not treatment.

A teacher repeating a family label is not clinical proof.

This is the difference between medicine and manipulation.

They were not diagnosing a condition.

They were manufacturing a reputation.

Black-and-White Judgment: Making Normal Life Impossible

Another major part of the system is black-and-white thinking.

There is no middle ground.

There is no context.

There is no ambiguity.

There is no ordinary human imperfection.

There is no “that was awkward.”

There is no “that was normal.”

There is no “that happens to everyone.”

There is no “that is part of being human.”

Every detail becomes an issue.

Every interaction becomes evidence.

Every social ambiguity becomes misconduct.

Every normal human complication becomes pathology.

That is how the phrase “it’s your behavior” becomes impossible to survive.

The standard is not applied normally. It is applied selectively.

If other people have complicated friendships, romantic confusion, awkward social boundaries, triangle relationships, mixed signals, emotional uncertainty, or imperfect judgment, it is treated as normal life.

People date.

People misunderstand each other.

People blur lines.

People have crushes.

People move on.

People stay friends.

People end up in awkward social situations.

People are imperfect.

That is life.

But when the same ordinary human complexity is attached to Kevin Perlman, it is twisted into something monstrous.

Now it is reckless.

Now it is unstable.

Now it is dangerous.

Now it is obsessive.

Now it is proof of bad character.

Now it is “your behavior.”

That is not morality.

That is discrimination.

The issue is not the behavior itself, because the same behavior is accepted in others.

The issue is who the behavior is attached to.

That exposes the fraud.

If the rule applies only to one person, then it is not a rule.

It is a weapon.

This is how the system creates an impossible life. The target is not judged by ordinary human standards. The target is judged by a zero-defect standard that no human being on earth could survive.

No mistakes.

No awkwardness.

No mixed signals.

No frustration.

No anger.

No confusion.

No dating complications.

No friendship complications.

No imperfect words.

No emotional reactions.

No human moments.

Everything becomes proof.

This is not accountability.

This is a rigged moral courtroom where the verdict was written before the evidence existed.

The purpose is not to evaluate behavior fairly.

The purpose is to make normal life impossible.

Because if every human interaction can be twisted into misconduct, then the target eventually stops interacting.

He stops dating.

He stops trusting.

He stops making friends.

He stops speaking freely.

He stops trying to be normal.

Then the system points at the isolation it created and says:

“See? Something is wrong with him.”

That is the trick.

Create impossible standards.

Punish normal behavior.

Destroy confidence.

Force isolation.

Then call the isolation proof.

This is why black-and-white thinking matters.

It is not just a personality flaw.

It is a control tactic.

It removes context. It removes mercy. It removes proportion. It removes the basic understanding that human beings are imperfect.

And once context is removed, anything can be made to look evil.

A friendship becomes obsession.

A date becomes abuse.

A disagreement becomes danger.

A question becomes paranoia.

A mistake becomes a diagnosis.

A normal social complication becomes a permanent character defect.

That is how a life is made unlivable.

The system does not need the target to do something truly wrong.

It only needs to reinterpret every ordinary thing as wrong.

Walking Away Becomes “Paranoia”

Another major tactic is the weaponization of distance.

If I walk away from a situation, it is called paranoia.

If I lose interest, it is called fear.

If I avoid harassment, it is called instability.

If I stop going somewhere because the environment is hostile, it is called avoidance.

If I decide I do not want to deal with provocation, it is called mental illness.

If I remove myself from people acting strangely, aggressively, or abusively, it is called delusion.

That is the trap.

The healthiest response to harassment is distance.

The safest response to provocation is walking away.

The most peaceful response to a hostile environment is leaving.

But in this system, even walking away is turned into evidence.

If I stay, they provoke.

If I react, they call it dangerousness.

If I leave, they call it paranoia.

If I avoid the situation later, they call it phobia, fear, instability, or agoraphobia.

So there is no acceptable behavior.

That proves the accusation is not sincere.

A sincere concern would recognize that walking away from conflict is healthy.

A fair person would understand that losing interest is normal.

A rational person would understand that nobody is required to stay in a hostile environment.

But this system treats disengagement as pathology because it needs every behavior to support the label.

Staying becomes evidence.

Leaving becomes evidence.

Speaking becomes evidence.

Silence becomes evidence.

Anger becomes evidence.

Calm becomes evidence.

Socializing becomes evidence.

Isolation becomes evidence.

That is not diagnosis.

That is a closed loop.

The conclusion is already written, and every action is forced to serve it.

This is how normal self-protection is weaponized.

The target is not allowed to have boundaries.

The target is not allowed to lose interest.

The target is not allowed to avoid hostile people.

The target is not allowed to say, “I do not want to be here.”

The target is not allowed to protect his peace.

Because the moment he does, the system says:

Unaddressable Provocation: Designed So It Cannot Be Reasoned With

Normally, people avoid situations that are too strange, too hostile, too irrational, or too impossible to address.

A normal person does not spend his life trying to reason with people who are deliberately provoking him.

A normal person walks away from people who are acting in bad faith.

A normal person focuses on problems that can actually be discussed, corrected, or resolved.

But in my life, the system forces the opposite.

I am repeatedly placed in situations where people use indirect aggression, psychological hints, staged behavior, mockery, stalking, and provocation in ways that are designed to be almost impossible to address.

If I say nothing, the provocation continues.

If I respond, the response is collected.

If I ask what is going on, the question is framed as paranoia.

If I try to explain the pattern, the explanation is framed as mental illness.

If I walk away, the walking away is framed as avoidance, fear, or instability.

If I defend myself, the defense is framed as aggression.

That is the trap.

Each situation is designed so it cannot be handled normally.

The provocation is indirect enough to deny.

The aggression is public enough to humiliate.

The pattern is repetitive enough to damage.

The setup is strange enough that explaining it sounds strange.

Then the target is forced into an impossible position:

Ignore it and absorb the damage.

Address it and look unstable.

Leave and be called paranoid.

Stay and be pushed toward reaction.

This is how the system manufactures the appearance of “different thinking.”

It creates situations no normal person could calmly explain, then uses the difficulty of explaining them as evidence that the target is strange, unstable, paranoid, or mentally ill.

That is not an accident.

That is the design.

The goal is not communication.

The goal is escalation.

The goal is to provoke confusion, frustration, anger, fear, exhaustion, or defensive speech, then isolate that reaction from the context that produced it.

The people using these tactics are not trying to resolve anything.

They are trying to create a record.

They are trying to make the target look unreasonable.

They are trying to make normal self-defense look like abnormal behavior.

They are trying to make a person who is being attacked appear to be the attacker.

And if the situation escalates toward violence, the system gets what it wanted: a stronger removal argument.

That is why these provocations are so dangerous.

They are designed to be unresolvable.

They are designed to force the target into a no-win exchange.

They are designed to make calm reasoning impossible.

They are designed to create the appearance that Kevin Perlman thinks differently, reacts strangely, or cannot function normally.

But the real abnormality is not the target’s reaction.

The real abnormality is the engineered situation.

When people create impossible interactions and then blame the target for struggling inside them, they are not observing mental illness.

They are manufacturing evidence.

They are creating the pressure, blocking normal resolution, provoking escalation, and then calling the result “behavior.”

That is not concern.

That is a setup.

“See? He is paranoid.”

But walking away from abuse is not paranoia.

Leaving a toxic situation is not mental illness.

Avoiding people who provoke you is not instability.

Refusing to stay in a rigged environment is not proof of fear.

It is self-preservation.

And the fact that self-preservation is labeled as illness reveals the motive.

The system does not want the target healthy.

It wants him trapped.

It wants him forced to remain inside the pressure chamber until he produces the reaction they need.

That is why walking away must be pathologized.

Because if the target can walk away, the system loses control.

“You Know What You Did”: The Forced-Confession Trap

There is one exchange that exposes the method.

Around 2015, my father, Ron Perlman, said:

“You know what you did.”

My response was simple:

“What did I do?”

He could not answer the question.

Instead, he said, in substance:

“People are not told what they did because they can lie.”

That answer is not evidence.

That answer is a trap.

If someone has a real accusation, they can state it.

If someone has a real fact, they can identify it.

If someone has a real concern, they can explain it.

But “you know what you did” is not an accusation. It is an empty box. The target is expected to fill the box himself.

That is why the phrase is so dangerous.

It is designed to create guilt without facts.

It is designed to make the person search his own memory for something that can be twisted.

It is designed to make the person defend against shadows.

It is designed to make the person talk, explain, guess, confess, deny, or emotionally react.

Then whatever the person says can be collected and contorted into the preexisting narrative:

“See? I told you so.”

This is not truth-seeking.

This is forced-confession psychology.

The accusation is kept vague because vagueness gives the accuser power. If the target is never told what the alleged conduct is, the target can never fully answer it. The accusation floats over every year, every relationship, every childhood moment, every mistake, every normal human imperfection.

The target is left asking:

What did I do?

What are they talking about?

Why is this happening?

Why won’t anyone say the actual accusation?

That confusion is not accidental.

The confusion is the mechanism.

If the target can be kept confused long enough, he may begin to believe he must have done something. He may begin to accept blame for events he did not create. He may begin to internalize guilt for the abuse being done to him.

That is the purpose.

Make the target believe he deserves the punishment.

Make the target believe he caused the stalking.

Make the target believe he caused the labels.

Make the target believe he caused the community hatred.

Make the target believe he caused the police attention.

Make the target believe he caused the cage being built around him.

That is brainwashing.

It is also evidence production.

The accuser does not need a fact if he can pressure the target into producing words, emotions, or reactions that can be twisted into facts.

This is why “you know what you did” fits perfectly with the shock-collar model.

Push the button.

Create distress.

Ask for confession.

Punish the question.

Collect the reaction.

Call the reaction proof.

The goal is not to discover truth.

The goal is to manufacture admission.

And if no admission exists, manufacture confusion until the target sounds guilty for asking what the accusation is.

That is why this tactic is so cruel.

It tries to make a person participate in his own destruction.

It tries to make the target accept the false story so he stops fighting the people creating it.

The Therapist as Confession Booth

The same tactic appeared in another form around 2001.

My mother, Anita Perlman, angrily pressured me to go to a therapist or psychiatrist and “tell them everything.”

On the surface, that can be made to sound like concern.

But in context, it was not concern.

It was another forced-confession trap.

The point was not to identify a real clinical problem. The point was to push me into a setting where I would be pressured to search my own life for guilt, confusion, memories, fragments, fears, mistakes, or ordinary human imperfections that could be collected and twisted into the family’s preexisting narrative.

It was not:

“Let us help you.”

It was:

“Go confess.”

But confess what?

That was never clearly stated.

That is the trap.

If a person is told to “tell them everything” without being given a factual accusation, the person is placed inside a psychological fog. He starts searching himself. He starts wondering what they mean. He starts trying to explain details that may have nothing to do with anything.

Then any small detail can be weaponized.

A memory becomes obsession.

A question becomes paranoia.

A fear becomes pathology.

A disagreement becomes lack of insight.

A defense becomes denial.

A normal human imperfection becomes a symptom.

That is why the therapist-confession tactic is so dangerous.

It uses the appearance of mental-health care to create a collection environment.

The therapist is not approached as a helper.

The therapist is turned into a confession booth.

The person is pushed to talk, not so he can heal, but so his words can be mined.

That is not treatment.

That is psychological evidence harvesting.

And it fits the same pattern:

Create a vague accusation.

Refuse to state the facts.

Pressure the target to explain himself.

Collect whatever he says.

Twist the fragments.

Call the fragments proof.

Then use the proof to justify the label that existed before the conversation ever began.

That is not clinical care.

That is reputation manufacturing through coerced self-disclosure.

A legitimate therapist helps a person understand reality. This tactic tries to make the person doubt reality.

A legitimate therapist protects confidentiality and context. This tactic turns disclosure into ammunition.

A legitimate therapist does not begin with a family’s hidden verdict. This tactic begins with the verdict and searches for material to support it.

That is why “go tell them everything” was not neutral.

It was part of the same machinery as “you know what you did.”

Both phrases create guilt without evidence.

Both phrases pressure the target to produce material.

Both phrases avoid stating a clear factual accusation.

Both phrases try to make the target participate in his own framing.

And both phrases serve the same deeper purpose:

To justify the motive that began long before any actual conduct could explain it.

The Echo Chamber of Guilt

Another major tactic is the echo chamber of guilt.

The accusation is never clear.

The evidence is never stated.

The factual charge keeps changing.

But the emotional message is constant:

“You know what you did.”

“Go tell them everything.”

“Do not fight it.”

“Admit you have a problem.”

“Accept that this is your fault.”

That is not truth.

That is guilt induction.

It is an attempt to make the target internalize blame for a punishment that was created by other people.

The system does not need a real confession if it can create a psychological confession. It does not need a real crime if it can make the target feel like he must have done something. It does not need evidence if it can keep repeating guilt until the target begins questioning himself.

That is why vague accusations are so powerful.

If someone says, “You did X on this date,” the accusation can be answered.

But if someone says, “You know what you did,” the accusation becomes infinite.

It can mean anything.

It can attach itself to any memory, any mistake, any childhood moment, any awkward interaction, any relationship, any fear, any private thought, any normal human imperfection.

The target is pushed into searching his own life for the missing accusation.

That is the trap.

The target starts asking:

Was it this?

Was it that?

Is this why they hate me?

Is this why they follow me?

Is this why strangers repeat things?

Is this why the police are involved?

Is this why my family will not stop?

Then the system uses the search itself as evidence.

“See? He is obsessive.”

“See? He is paranoid.”

“See? He has guilt.”

“See? He knows.”

That is not investigation.

That is psychological framing.

The accusation is left vague so the target’s confusion can be harvested.

The confusion is not accidental.

The confusion is the mechanism.

“Do Not Fight It”: Manufacturing Submission

Around 2001, my mother, Anita Perlman, said something to the effect of:

“Do not fight it.”

That phrase matters.

Because in context, it did not sound like help.

It sounded like surrender.

Do not fight what?

Do not fight the label.

Do not fight the shocks.

Do not fight the humiliation.

Do not fight the people provoking you.

Do not fight the family narrative.

Do not fight the police pressure.

Do not fight the migration into a cage.

Do not fight the disappearance being prepared for you.

That is the meaning of the phrase in context.

It is not concern.

It is submission training.

The system wants the target to stop struggling. It wants the target to accept the false story. It wants the target to stop asking why. It wants the target to stop documenting. It wants the target to stop resisting the psychological cage being built around him.

Because if the target accepts guilt, the system has less work to do.

If the target believes he deserves the punishment, he stops exposing the punishment.

If the target believes he is defective, he stops challenging the people who labeled him.

If the target believes the cage is his fault, he stops identifying the people building it.

That is why coerced self-blame is so important.

The easiest person to remove is the person who has been convinced he deserves removal.

That is the goal.

Not truth.

Not healing.

Not accountability.

Submission.

The system wants the person to walk himself into the cage and call it insight.

When One Label Fails, the System Changes Costumes

Another major part of this pattern is label-switching.

The original cover story is mental illness:

“He is crazy.”

“He is paranoid.”

“He is unstable.”

“He needs help.”

“It is his behavior.”

But when that does not work, the accusation changes shape.

Suddenly the person is not only “crazy.”

Now he is dangerous.

Now he is a stalker.

Now he is reckless.

Now he hates women.

Now he hates Black people.

Now he is violent.

Now he has guilt.

Now he has a “history.”

Now he needs court supervision.

Now he needs diversion.

Now he needs forced mental-health control.

That is not a new concern.

That is the same machine changing costumes.

The purpose is not to identify the truth. The purpose is to find whatever label will work.

If “mentally ill” does not work, use “criminal.”

If “criminal” does not work, use “dangerous.”

If “dangerous” does not work, use “stalker.”

If “stalker” does not work, use “abusive.”

If “abusive” does not work, use “racist.”

If one story collapses, invent another.

This exposes motive.

A person who wants truth does not keep changing accusations until something sticks.

A person who wants help does not fabricate criminal scenarios.

A person who wants safety does not create danger.

A person who wants distance simply stays away.

But this system does not stay away.

It follows, watches, provokes, collects, interprets, escalates, and recruits.

That is not concern.

That is obsession.

And when the obsession is aimed at removing a person from normal life, the proper word is not help.

The proper word is eradication.

Manufactured Dangerousness

The label “crazy” is not always enough.

To truly remove someone from society, the story usually has to become darker.

The person must be made to look dangerous.

That is where the false stories come in.

Stories about violence.

Stories about knives.

Stories about guilt.

Stories about women.

Stories about race.

Stories about paranoia.

Stories about anger.

Stories about instability.

Stories about a “past” that was created backward to justify a future cage.

This is manufactured dangerousness.

The goal is not to respond to actual danger.

The goal is to manufacture the appearance of danger so that punishment looks like protection.

If a person is peaceful, the story must make him look violent.

If a person is warm, the story must make him look hateful.

If a person is social, the story must make him look inappropriate.

If a person is passive, the story must provoke him until he reacts.

Then the reaction becomes the evidence.

This is how the machine works.

It creates the pressure, captures the reaction, removes the context, and calls the result proof.

Special Schools, Special Classes, and Early Profiling

The early school placements matter.

Special schools, special classes, small controlled groups, and unusual observation environments are not automatically abusive. Many children receive specialized education for legitimate reasons.

But in this context, the question is different:

Was the child being helped, or was the child being profiled?

If a child is placed into a special environment after already being labeled by family members with psychology-related backgrounds, then the school environment can become part of the label.

The child is watched differently.

The child is interpreted differently.

The child is compared differently.

The child is recorded differently.

The child is not simply educated.

The child is processed.

That is why early placements such as special programs, small classes, or psychologically charged school environments matter. A class of fifteen students can be a learning environment. It can also become an observation chamber if the adults are using it to sort, categorize, or confirm preexisting labels.

The question is not whether schools can help children.

Of course they can.

The question is whether a child was placed into educational settings under a poisoned premise.

If the family label came first, then every teacher, counselor, staff member, friend, and classmate who later interacted with the child may have been interacting with the label before interacting with the child.

That is how a child becomes a case before he becomes a person.

That is how education becomes surveillance.

That is how ordinary development becomes evidence.

From Family Labeling to Institutional Machinery

A family does not need to own the government to use government resources.

A family only needs to create a label that institutions accept.

Once a label is accepted, schools, teachers, psychologists, police, courts, community members, friends, and strangers can begin acting on it.

That is how a private family smear becomes a public operating system.

The family says:

“He is unstable.”

The school hears it.

The teacher watches differently.

The friend is warned.

The date is influenced.

The police are told there is “history.”

The court hears there is “history.”

The public hears rumors.

Then every layer points to the previous layer and says:

“See? There must be something there.”

But the “something” may simply be the original lie traveling from person to person.

That is how a false label becomes a cage.

Police Were Waiting for the Reaction

Another part of the pattern is that the police side of the system appears to have been waiting for a specific kind of entrance.

The expectation seemed to be that I would eventually walk into a police station emotionally destroyed, confused, angry, terrified, and speaking in a way that could be written off as psychiatric instability.

In other words, the system appeared to be waiting for the result it had spent years trying to manufacture.

But that is not what happened.

I hired private investigators.

I collected photographs.

I collected video.

I tried to walk in with evidence.

That changes the story.

Because if the target walks in with proof instead of incoherent panic, the people expecting a “crazy” performance have a problem.

The target is no longer simply reacting.

The target is documenting.

The target is no longer giving them the collapse they were waiting for.

The target is showing the machinery.

That is when the psychological tactics become more aggressive.

The pressure increases.

The ridicule increases.

The “he is imagining it” language increases.

The gaslighting increases.

The system must deny what the target is documenting because the target’s evidence threatens the entire psychiatric script.

This is the same pattern repeated again:

Create pressure.

Expect collapse.

When collapse does not happen, attack credibility.

When evidence appears, call the evidence obsession.

When documentation appears, call the documentation paranoia.

When the target asks why, call the question mental illness.

The system does not want evidence.

The system wants a reaction.

The Website, the Paper Trail, and the Fear of Proof

Around 2010, when I began creating a public record through a website, the pressure and arrests became worse.

That timing matters.

Before a paper trail exists, the system can operate through rumor, hints, private pressure, social humiliation, and vague accusations.

But once the target writes things down, the system has a problem.

Now there is a counter-narrative.

Now there is a record.

Now there is a way to compare dates, names, threats, arrests, public incidents, police conduct, family statements, and repeated patterns.

Now the target is no longer only reacting.

He is documenting.

That changes everything.

A system built on fog fears documentation.

A system built on rumor fears records.

A system built on humiliation fears exposure.

A system built on psychiatric labeling fears coherent explanation.

So the system escalates.

The message becomes:

Do not take pictures.

Do not document.

Do not create proof.

Do not speak publicly.

Do not name names.

Do not build a record.

Do not show the pattern.

The target is then accused of being a bad person for saying bad things about people.

But that reverses the problem.

If people are participating in a system of provocation, humiliation, false labeling, retaliation, and attempted removal, then documenting that conduct is not the original harm.

The conduct is the harm.

The documentation is the response.

That is why calling the target “bad” for documenting the pattern is another inversion.

It is the same old trick:

Create the abuse.

Punish the record of the abuse.

Then call the record proof that the target is unstable.

Police, Private Security, and Public Removal Systems

People often assume that police power and private civilian pressure are separate worlds.

They are not always separate.

Modern cities have many examples of public-private removal systems: business districts, private security guards, police partnerships, homeless sweeps, exclusion programs, nuisance enforcement, and informal pressure campaigns against people considered undesirable in public space.

Business Improvement Districts are one example. Critics and civil-rights groups have documented how some districts use private security or “ambassador” programs alongside police to remove people seen as bad for business, especially unhoused people, poor people, or people labeled as disorderly.

This matters because it proves a public-private method exists.

Private actors can identify a person as a problem.

Private security can monitor or pressure that person.

Police can be called in when the target reacts or refuses to move.

Courts can then inherit the record.

The public then hears:

“He has a history.”

But the “history” may have been manufactured by the same removal system.

This is not limited to homelessness. The structure can apply anywhere a person is pre-labeled as undesirable, unstable, dangerous, suspicious, disruptive, or unwanted.

The method is:

Label the target.

Watch the target.

Pressure the target.

Wait for reaction.

Call police.

Create record.

Use record as proof.

Repeat.

That is why private security and police collaboration matters. It shows how non-police actors can help create the conditions for police involvement while pretending they are merely reporting behavior.

The target experiences a trap.

The system calls it public safety.

The Circus of Probable Cause

A real accusation has a shape.

It has facts.

It has dates.

It has witnesses.

It has a specific act.

It has a legal theory.

It has probable cause.

It can be investigated.

It can be challenged.

But this system operates differently.

The accusation is vague.

The accusation shifts.

The accusation is hinted.

The accusation is staged.

The accusation is whispered through other people.

The accusation appears as guilt, not fact.

“You know what you did.”

“Tell them everything.”

“Do not fight it.”

“You have a problem too.”

That is not probable cause.

That is psychological fog.

If there were a real crime, there would be an investigation.

If there were a real victim, there would be a clear allegation.

If there were a real danger, there would be specific facts.

If there were a real legal basis, it would not require a planet of strangers repeating hints and provocations.

That is why the worldwide-shame mechanism exposes itself.

The goal is not to investigate a crime.

The goal is to make the target feel as if he must deserve punishment.

The goal is not justice.

The goal is mental surrender.

The goal is to make the person accept the idea that he deserves execution, confinement, institutionalization, exile, or public destruction, even when no factual accusation is ever plainly stated.

That is why it becomes a circus.

The system does not have a charge.

It has a script.

And the script is designed to make the target act guilty while never being told what he supposedly did.

How Would Everyone Know? The Mechanics of Spread

One of the intimidation questions is always:

“How would everyone know you?”

That question is designed to make the target sound impossible before the mechanism is even examined.

But the answer is not magic.

It is notification.

It is word of mouth.

It is institutional labeling.

It is people informing other people.

It is authority figures giving the frame.

It is the internet being used as an amplifier.

It is privacy invasion being used to collect fragments.

It is those fragments being twisted out of context.

Before the internet, the alleged system spread through people.

A teacher tells another teacher.

A school tells another school.

A family member tells a friend.

A friend tells a group.

A police-connected person tells a community member.

A community member tells a business.

A business tells regulars.

A stranger is warned before Kevin arrives.

The wording may sound polite:

“Kevin is special.”

“Kevin needs to be watched.”

“Kevin has problems.”

“Kevin is unstable.”

“Kevin needs help.”

“Kevin may react strangely.”

“Do these things and watch how he responds.”

That is how a label travels without ever being tested.

It does not require every person to know the whole story.

It only requires each person to repeat the warning.

Then the next person treats the warning as fact.

That is how the label arrives before the person.

That is how a child, teenager, college student, employee, artist, programmer, or ordinary person walks into a room and is already interpreted before he speaks.

After the internet became available, the spread allegedly changed scale.

By the early and mid-1990s, the internet created a new opportunity for the same labeling system to move faster, wider, and more quietly. A private rumor could become an online warning. A social label could become a searchable identity. A local smear could be exported into chat rooms, message boards, IRC, email, forums, and later social media.

In my account, this is why the early internet period matters.

Around 1994, my brother Jason Perlman strongly wanted me to see the internet. In hindsight, I believe that period became a new stage of the same operation: the point where the old word-of-mouth label could be digitized, amplified, and distributed.

The old phrase may have been:

“Kevin is a special child.”

The internet version became:

“Kevin is unstable.”

“Kevin is dangerous.”

“Kevin is crazy.”

“Watch him.”

“Set him up.”

“Get him to react.”

“Make him look like he has ideas of reference.”

“Make him look like he is stalking women.”

“Make him look like he is doing something wrong.”

That is not organic social life.

That is informational warfare.

The internet allowed the smear to travel faster than Kevin could correct it.

It allowed people who had never met me to be given a script before interacting with me.

It allowed online women, chat users, strangers, and social groups to allegedly play roles, create bait, frame ordinary communication, and turn normal interaction into evidence.

That is how harmless conduct becomes suspicious.

A friend asks for help.

A person checks an email for someone who asked.

Then the context is stripped away.

Suddenly the story becomes:

“Kevin is hacking into her email.”

A woman flirts, baits, or creates a confusing interaction.

Then the context is stripped away.

Suddenly the story becomes:

“Kevin is stalking women.”

A person is asked to look at something online.

Then the context is stripped away.

Suddenly the story becomes:

“Kevin is doing something wrong.”

That is the tactic.

Create the setup.

Remove the context.

Distribute the accusation.

Use the accusation as proof.

This is why privacy violations matter.

If someone is watching a person’s computer use, communications, browsing, messages, friendships, and ordinary online behavior, then every harmless act can be harvested and reframed.

The crime is not the harmless act.

The crime is the surveillance, the setup, the privacy invasion, the framing, and the out-of-context dissemination.

But in this system, the real crime is ignored because the target has already been labeled.

If this happened to anyone else, people would recognize the problem immediately.

They would ask:

Who was watching his computer?

Who invaded his privacy?

Who put spyware or monitoring tools on his devices?

Who collected the information?

Who distributed it?

Who removed the context?

Who used it to create a false narrative?

But when the name is Kevin Perlman, the same common sense disappears.

The privacy violation becomes invisible.

The setup becomes invisible.

The framing becomes invisible.

The only thing people are told to see is the label.

That is how the situation is reversed.

The people committing the privacy violations act like investigators.

The people spreading disinformation act like witnesses.

The people creating bait act like victims.

The people twisting context act like protectors.

And the person being watched, framed, and smeared becomes the suspect.

That is the machinery.

It is not magic.

It is a pipeline.

First, create the childhood label.

Then spread it through schools, friends, family, and community.

Then use authority figures to give the label credibility.

Then use the internet to amplify it.

Then use privacy violations to collect fragments.

Then use staged interactions to create false context.

Then use the false context to reinforce the original label.

Then tell the public:

“See? We were right about him.”

That is why the “how would everyone know?” question is dishonest.

They know because someone tells them.

They know because the label is distributed.

They know because the script is passed along.

They know because authority gives permission.

They know because the internet became a weapon.

They know because the same lie has been moved from person to person, place to place, and platform to platform.

The question is not:

“How could everyone know?”

The real question is:

“Who is notifying them, what are they being told, and why has no one been held accountable for spreading it?”

That is the question the system does not want answered.

Because once the mechanics of spread are understood, the accusation of impossibility collapses.

The pattern does not require magic.

It requires a label, a network, a script, authority permission, and repetition.

And once those exist, the lie can travel farther than the truth.

How Does It Become Every Public Place?

This is one of the biggest questions.

Why would this appear in coffee shops?

Why restaurants?

Why bars?

Why gyms?

Why pool halls?

Why auto shops?

Why car groups?

Why public venues?

Why friendships?

Why women?

Why men?

Why almost every place a person tries to enter just to live a normal life?

The question is not only why.

The question is how.

A normal family cannot do that by itself.

A normal rumor cannot do that by itself.

A normal disagreement cannot follow someone from place to place, city to city, decade to decade, and public setting to public setting.

For that kind of pattern to exist, something larger has to be happening.

A label has to travel.

A warning has to travel.

A story has to travel.

A script has to travel.

The person must be entering spaces where others have already been told how to see him before he has even said a word.

That is the real power of reputation destruction.

If the label arrives first, the person never gets to arrive as himself.

He arrives as the rumor.

He arrives as the warning.

He arrives as the accusation.

He arrives as the prewritten story.

Then every person who interacts with him is not interacting with a human being. They are interacting with the label they were given.

That is how normal life becomes impossible.

The target is not allowed to meet people naturally.

He is introduced by accusation before he opens his mouth.

He is interpreted before he acts.

He is judged before he speaks.

He is provoked before he understands the room.

That is not social life.

That is a moving courtroom.

The Forest Fire of Defamation

A false label can spread like a forest fire.

At first, it may begin as a family accusation.

Then it reaches teachers.

Then friends.

Then schools.

Then police.

Then community members.

Then workplaces.

Then public venues.

Then strangers.

After the internet, the spread becomes even easier. A reputation can be poisoned faster, wider, and with less accountability. A label can be repeated by people who never witnessed anything. A person can be framed by whispers, posts, private messages, warnings, hints, and “concerns” that are never tested against facts.

That is how a human being becomes a public myth.

The label becomes bigger than the person.

People no longer need evidence.

They have heard enough.

They have been warned enough.

They have been given permission enough.

And once people believe they have permission, many will participate.

Some will think they are helping.

Some will think they are protecting others.

Some will think the target deserves it.

Some will enjoy the power.

Some will enjoy the cruelty.

Some will hide behind the crowd.

Some will say, “Everyone knows.”

But “everyone knows” is not evidence.

Sometimes “everyone knows” only means the lie has been repeated long enough.

Forced Migration and the Planned Point of Awareness

Another tactic is forced migration.

The target enters a normal place — a car group, a coffee shop, a gym, a restaurant, a public venue — and the environment becomes hostile.

So he leaves.

He goes somewhere else.

Then the same pattern appears again with a different group of people.

A different car group.

A different coffee shop.

A different gym.

A different neighborhood.

A different city.

A different set of faces.

But the same label.

The same themes.

The same provocation.

The same psychological pressure.

The same reversal.

The same accusation that Kevin Perlman is the problem.

That is the trap.

If one group does it, the system can call it a personality conflict.

If one coffee shop does it, the system can call it a misunderstanding.

If one car group does it, the system can say, “Maybe they just did not like him.”

But when the same pattern follows from place to place, from group to group, from gym to gym, from coffee shop to coffee shop, from city to city, and from decade to decade, the explanation changes.

That is no longer ordinary social conflict.

That is relay.

One group hands the label to the next group.

One setting hands the warning to the next setting.

One crowd hands the script to the next crowd.

The target is forced to keep moving, not because he cannot get along with people, but because the label arrives before he does.

Then the system reverses the situation.

It says:

“Kevin keeps leaving places.”

“Kevin does not get along with people.”

“Kevin is paranoid.”

“Kevin is unstable.”

“Kevin causes problems everywhere.”

But that erases the first half of the pattern.

Why did he leave?

What was happening there?

Who warned the next group?

Why did the same accusation appear in a new place?

Why did unrelated strangers suddenly know the same themes?

Why did every new environment begin acting like it had already been briefed?

That is the question the system avoids.

Because if the question is asked honestly, the answer is not “Kevin cannot get along with people.”

The answer is that the environment is being poisoned before he can participate normally.

This alleged pattern began around 1977, when I was five years old. But it did not become fully visible to me until around 2001.

That distinction matters.

A child can be targeted without understanding the targeting.

A teenager can be surrounded by scripted behavior and still think these are just strange friendships, strange teachers, strange social conflicts, or strange coincidences.

A college student can be watched, analyzed, and provoked without yet understanding the larger pattern.

For years, I did not know what I was seeing.

But in my allegation, that was by design.

The point of awareness was always part of the trap.

If a person is psychologically pressured, gaslit, provoked, monitored, isolated, and surrounded with repeated idea-of-reference tactics for years, there will eventually be a moment when he begins to recognize that something larger is happening.

The system knows that.

The family knows that.

The psychology-connected people know that.

The police-connected actors know that.

The people running the script know that.

They know that if a child is placed inside this kind of pressure system long enough, eventually the child becomes an adult who starts asking questions.

And that is the moment they are waiting for.

Because the moment of awareness can be reframed as the beginning of “mental illness.”

The target says:

“Something is going on.”

The system says:

“See? Paranoia.”

The target says:

“These people are repeating the same themes.”

The system says:

“See? Ideas of reference.”

The target says:

“This started before I understood it.”

The system says:

“See? Delusion.”

The target says:

“The same pattern follows me from place to place.”

The system says:

“See? He thinks everyone is involved.”

That is why the point of awareness is so important.

They create the condition.

They wait for the person to notice the condition.

Then they call the noticing the condition.

That is the trick.

The labels were not discovered at the point of awareness.

The labels were waiting for the point of awareness.

They were prewritten.

They were already prepared.

In my allegation, my mother, Anita Perlman — an art therapist with a psychology background who worked at Cedars-Sinai — did not simply become concerned in 2001. The psychiatric framing allegedly began decades earlier, when I was a child. By the time I began recognizing the pattern, the response was already prepared: therapists, psychiatrists, labels, explanations, and preselected narratives designed to interpret my awareness as illness.

That is not care.

That is setup logic.

It is like damaging a car for years, waiting for the engine light to come on, and then saying the engine light is the problem.

It is like taking a sledgehammer to the engine and claiming you are trying to repair the car.

You do not create damage in order to cure damage.

You do not manufacture distress in order to treat distress.

You do not create the appearance of mental illness in order to heal mental illness.

If the purpose were treatment, the system would reduce harm.

If the purpose were truth, the system would answer questions.

If the purpose were health, the system would support healthy functioning.

But if the purpose is removal, then the system needs the person to finally react to what has been done.

That is why 2001 matters.

By 2001, the pattern became harder to miss.

Michael Patrick Huntley, who had befriended me around 1986 when I was about fourteen years old, allegedly began making statements that did not sound like ordinary friendship, ordinary conflict, or ordinary concern.

Statements such as:

“World of paranoia.”

“I’ve given you enough rope to hang yourself with.”

“We are using the judicial system against you.”

“Have a good life now.”

“You had better live a careful life.”

“It’s your behavior.”

Those statements did not land like jokes.

They landed like the curtain being pulled back.

At first, I could not fully process what I was hearing. People do not normally walk up to someone and say things like “world of paranoia,” “have a good life now,” or “we are using the judicial system against you” unless something much larger is happening.

For years after that, I was dazed, confused, and in severe mental anguish trying to understand what I had just walked into.

That confusion was not weakness.

It was the normal result of seeing pieces of a hidden system before having the language to explain it.

The alleged significance of Huntley’s statements is that they suggested the setup was not new. It suggested that the trap had been developing for years.

If Huntley and others had befriended me as teenagers, remained close for years, and then, around 2001, spoke as if a long-running operation was finally entering its next phase, then the issue was not one friendship gone bad.

It was role assignment.

It was relay.

It was the same pattern that appears everywhere else: the characters change, but the script continues.

Walking away from Huntley would not have solved it.

Walking away from Paul Humphrey would not have solved it.

Walking away from one car group, one coffee shop, one gym, one school, one city, or one social circle would not solve it.

Because the issue was never one person.

The issue was the template.

The people rotate.

The settings rotate.

The accusations rotate.

The pressure points rotate.

But the pattern remains.

That is what forced migration means.

The target is pushed out of one place, then blamed for leaving.

The target is pushed into another place, then the same script appears again.

The target tries to start over, but the label arrives first.

This also means the later documentation did not create the problem.

My website did not create the mob.

My police reports did not create the targeting.

My photographs did not create the pattern.

My private investigators did not create the pattern.

The documentation came after the pressure.

The records came after the relay.

The website came after years of trying to understand what had already been happening.

That is basic cause and effect.

But the system reverses it.

It claims the documentation caused the targeting.

It claims the police reports caused the retaliation.

It claims the website caused the hostility.

It claims Kevin Perlman “does not get along with people.”

It claims Kevin Perlman is “forcing himself on groups.”

It claims Kevin Perlman is “paranoid.”

But the record exists because the pattern existed first.

The movement exists because the environments were contaminated first.

The questions exist because the targeting existed first.

The response is not the origin.

The response is the evidence that something had already been happening.

That is why the point of awareness is so important.

Before 2001, the system was allegedly operating beneath my understanding.

After 2001, I began recognizing enough of it to ask questions.

And once I began asking questions, the retaliation became louder.

The threats became clearer.

The judicial intimidation became clearer.

The mental-illness framing became more aggressive.

The pressure escalated because recognition itself became dangerous.

Not dangerous because I was violent.

Dangerous because I was beginning to understand.

Dangerous because I was beginning to connect the rotating people, the repeated tactics, the family label, the police pressure, the judicial threats, the school history, and the public humiliation.

The system does not fear the target’s behavior.

The system fears the target’s explanation.

That is why every new place becomes another stage.

The goal is not only to make Kevin Perlman leave.

The goal is to make every departure look like proof.

The target is pushed from place to place, then blamed for moving.

The target is harassed out of one environment, then called unstable for not staying.

The target is denied normal participation, then accused of failing to participate normally.

That is not social incompatibility.

That is social exclusion by design.

And it has allegedly been operating since childhood, becoming fully visible around 2001 when the people involved began saying the quiet part out loud.

The point of awareness was not the beginning of the problem.

It was the moment they tried to call awareness itself the problem.

Permission to Hurt

This is the sociology of the pattern.

Most people know that stalking, provoking, humiliating, defaming, and psychologically battering another human being is wrong.

But if the target is labeled first, the moral barrier changes.

The label gives permission.

If they believe, he is “crazy,” people think they can provoke him.

If they believe, he is “dangerous,” people think they can preemptively punish him.

If they believe, he is “unstable,” people think they can mock him.

If they think, he is “a stalker,” people think they can stalk him back.

If they believe, he is “bad,” people think cruelty becomes justice.

That is the trick.

The accusation gives people permission to do things they would normally know are wrong.

They can say:

“We are doing it because of him.”

“We are doing it because he is dangerous.”

“We are doing it because he has a history.”

“We are doing it because he deserves it.”

But that is how mobs work.

A mob does not need truth.

A mob needs permission.

Once the target is dehumanized, the crowd can laugh while harming him. They can smirk while provoking him. They can tease while destroying him. They can pretend cruelty is a joke.

That does not make the conduct harmless.

It makes the conduct more revealing.

“People Are Just Teasing You”: Laughing as Cover

One of the most important cover stories is teasing.

When my father said, in substance, that people were “just teasing,” the phrase had a much darker meaning in context.

Teasing becomes the excuse.

Mockery becomes the disguise.

Laughter becomes the camouflage.

A person can be psychologically battered in public, and when he objects, the system says:

“Relax. It is just a joke.”

But it is not a joke if the same themes repeat daily for years.

It is not a joke if the target cannot escape it.

It is not a joke if it is designed to provoke distress.

It is not a joke if it is used to create a psychiatric narrative.

It is not a joke if it is used to make someone look unstable.

It is not a joke if police, courts, family, community members, or strangers use the reaction as evidence.

Laughter does not erase harm.

A person can laugh while committing cruelty.

A person can laugh while humiliating someone.

A person can laugh while destroying a life.

That is why teasing is such an effective cover.

It lets the aggressor pretend the target is overreacting.

It lets the crowd deny intent.

It lets the system say:

“He cannot take a joke.”

But the joke is the weapon.

The smirk is the weapon.

The laughter is the weapon.

The goal is to make the target look humorless, unstable, paranoid, angry, or dangerous for objecting to repeated psychological attacks.

That is not humor.

That is sadism with plausible deniability.

The Reverse Accusation

Another tactic is reverse accusation.

The system stalks the target, then calls the target a stalker.

The system provokes the target, then calls the target aggressive.

The system humiliates the target, then calls the target unstable.

The system creates fear, then calls the target paranoid.

The system poisons relationships, then calls the target isolated.

The system spreads rumors, then calls the target obsessed for answering them.

The system documents the target, then calls the target dangerous for documenting back.

This is how the crime is hidden.

The people doing the thing accuse the target of the thing.

That is not confusion.

That is strategy.

If the target is being stalked, call him a stalker.

If the target is being abused, call him abusive.

If the target is being terrorized, call him dangerous.

If the target is being framed, call him paranoid.

That way the original conduct disappears behind the accusation.

The target is trapped defending himself against the mirror image of what is being done to him.

This is why “it’s your behavior” is so powerful.

It turns their behavior into his alleged identity.

“He Is Lying, So Do It to Him”: Repetition as Cover-Up

Another tactic is repetition as cover-up.

The target identifies a harm.

Then the system denies the harm.

Then the system repeats the harm more aggressively.

Then the system claims the repetition is justified because the target spoke about it.

That is the trick.

If I say, “My father put a shock collar on a dog,” the response becomes:

“We do not believe you, so we will shock you psychologically.”

If I say, “People are stalking me,” the response becomes:

“We do not believe you, so we will get together and stalk you.”

If I say, “People are using psychological terror tactics,” the response becomes:

“We do not believe you, so we will use psychological terror tactics.”

If I say, “This is being done to silence me,” the response becomes:

“We do not believe you, so we will punish you for speaking.”

That is not disbelief.

That is confession by repetition.

A person who truly does not believe an accusation does not recreate the accusation.

A person who truly thinks something is false does not organize people to imitate it.

A person who truly wants the truth does not punish the person for describing the conduct.

But this system does the opposite.

It takes every report, every complaint, every police report, every statement, every explanation, every act of self-defense speech, and turns it into a new excuse to do more of the same thing.

Then the cover story becomes, especially with the Police, Family, Judicial System and Psychology Community:

“Kevin is making people do this.”

“Kevin is causing the reaction.”

“Kevin is saying bad things, so people are angry.”

“Kevin is lying, so people are teaching him a lesson.”

That is another inversion.

The original abuse disappears.

The response to the abuse becomes the alleged cause.

The target reports stalking, and the system says he caused the stalking by reporting it.

The target reports threats, and the system says he caused the threats by speaking.

The target reports psychological tactics, and the system says he caused the tactics by naming them.

The target reports police misconduct, and the system says he caused retaliation by documenting it.

This is how self-defense speech is suppressed.

The message is:

“If you talk about what we are doing, we will do it harder.”

Then, when the target reacts to the escalation, the reaction is called proof.

That is not accountability.

That is retaliation.

And it shows why the phrase “it’s your behavior” is so dishonest.

The behavior being punished is not wrongdoing.

The behavior being punished is speech.

The behavior being punished is documentation.

The behavior being punished is naming the method.

The behavior being punished is refusing to let the cover story stand.

This tactic also protects the original timeline.

If the system can pretend the abuse began because the target spoke about it, then it avoids the real question:

Why was it happening before he ever spoke?

Why was it happening before he understood it?

Why did it begin when he was a child?

Why did it exist before the police reports?

Why did it exist before the website?

Why did it exist before the documentation?

Why did it exist before the target had language for it?

That is why the “he is lying, so do it to him” excuse collapses.

It cannot explain the beginning.

It cannot explain the childhood targeting.

It cannot explain the original label.

It cannot explain the family projection.

It cannot explain the early school profiling.

It cannot explain the decades of psychological shocks before the target could even identify the system.

It only explains the cover-up.

The system creates the harm.

The target names the harm.

The system repeats the harm.

Then the system blames the target for the repetition.

That is not proof that the target lied.

That is proof that the system is trying to punish him for telling the truth.

In 2001, Michael Patrick Huntley used the phrase:

“World of paranoia.”

At the time, the phrase was difficult to process. But in hindsight, it fits the same pattern.

Create a world of signals, threats, hints, staged references, and psychological pressure.

Then, when the target notices, call the noticing paranoia.

Create the maze.

Then call the person crazy for describing the maze.

That is the tactic.

And once that tactic is distributed, it spreads like every other tactic.

People repeat it.

Police repeat it.

Community members repeat it.

Strangers repeat it.

The target speaks, and the system shocks harder.

The target documents, and the system humiliates harder.

The target reports, and the system retaliates harder.

Then the system says:

“See? It is your behavior.”

But the truth is simpler:

They are not responding to wrongdoing.

They are suppressing exposure.

The Historical Pattern: Surveillance, Discrediting, and Psychiatric Control

The point is not that every historical government program automatically proves every private event in one person’s life.

The point is that the methods are not imaginary.

History already shows that governments and institutions have used surveillance, discrediting, psychological pressure, psychiatric labeling, and reputation destruction as tools of control.

COINTELPRO is one example. The historical record shows the method: monitor, infiltrate, discredit, disrupt, neutralize.

Soviet political psychiatry is another example. Psychiatry was used as a weapon against dissent and nonconformity. People could be treated as mentally ill because they disagreed with the system’s version of reality. The abuse of diagnoses such as “sluggish schizophrenia” became a major international psychiatric-ethics scandal.

MKULTRA is another historical marker. The Senate record itself described it as CIA research into behavioral modification. That matters because it proves that behavioral control was not fantasy. It was an actual government research category.

The Stasi model is another warning. Social surveillance does not require every participant to understand the full machinery. It only requires enough people to repeat the warning, report the target, provoke the target, isolate the target, and treat the target as already guilty.

The legal history matters too. In O’Connor v. Donaldson, the Supreme Court held that mental illness alone cannot justify locking up a person who is not dangerous and can live safely in freedom.

That creates a very important question:

If a person is not actually dangerous, but someone wants him confined, what must be manufactured?

Dangerousness.

That is why false violence stories matter.

That is why staged provocations matter.

That is why fake criminal scenarios matter.

That is why people are pushed to react.

That is why the narrative shifts from “he is different” to “he is dangerous.”

The goal is to build the missing bridge between a private psychiatric smear and legal confinement.

That bridge is manufactured dangerousness.

Government-Style Operations and the Question of Motive

The reason historical government operations matter is not because every historical example is identical.

The reason they matter is because they show that these methods exist.

Surveillance exists.

Discrediting exists.

Infiltration exists.

Psychological pressure exists.

Behavioral modification research exists.

Psychiatric labeling has been used politically.

Government agencies have abused power before and later called it national security, public safety, anti-subversion, medical necessity, or institutional concern.

The lesson from history is simple:

Power often does not begin by proving guilt.

Power begins by manufacturing suspicion.

Then it isolates the target.

Then it discredits the target.

Then it provokes the target.

Then it uses the reaction as proof.

Then it says:

“See? We were right about him.”

That is the template.

Discredit.

Isolate.

Provoke.

Collect.

Twist.

Neutralize.

The language changes depending on the era.

In one era, the target is called subversive.

In another, mentally ill.

In another, dangerous.

In another, criminal.

In another, extremist.

In another, unstable.

But the method is the same.

Define the person first.

Interpret the evidence second.

Punish the person third.

Call the punishment necessary.

That is why these historical parallels matter.

They show that this kind of machinery is not fantasy. It has existed in governments, police states, intelligence programs, psychiatric systems, and coercive institutions.

And when a similar structure is aimed at a child, the moral horror becomes even greater.

When Exposure Becomes the Real Threat

If this began as a family smear, then the original motive may have been shame, fear, hatred, projection, and control.

But when schools, police, community members, psychology-connected people, courts, and public groups become involved, the motive changes.

The motive becomes exposure prevention.

Once enough people have participated, the label must survive.

If the label collapses, the conduct becomes visible.

If the conduct becomes visible, the institutions become exposed.

If the institutions become exposed, the public has to ask the question nobody wants to answer:

What kind of system does this to a child?

That is why the target becomes more dangerous when he starts understanding the pattern.

Not dangerous because he is violent.

Dangerous because he can explain.

Dangerous because he can name the method.

Dangerous because he can connect the family smear to the institutional machinery.

Dangerous because he can show that the “help” was not help.

Dangerous because he can show that the label was not diagnosis.

Dangerous because he can show that the reactions were manufactured.

At that point, the target’s speech becomes the threat.

So the system must call the speech paranoia.

The target’s memory becomes the threat.

So the system must call the memory obsession.

The target’s documentation becomes the threat.

So the system must call the documentation fixation.

The target’s questions become the threat.

So the system must punish the questions.

This is where “national security” logic can become a cover story. Not because the target is a true national-security threat, but because exposure of the conduct would humiliate or implicate powerful people and institutions.

The actual threat is disclosure.

The threat is the public learning that respected systems can behave like predators while calling themselves protectors.

The threat is the public learning that the language of concern can be used as a costume for removal.

That is why the system does not simply walk away.

A person can walk away from a misunderstanding.

A family can walk away from a disagreement.

But an operation cannot walk away from exposure.

It has to keep the cover story alive.

Engineered Self-Destruction as a Disappearance Method

There is an even darker possibility that has to be named carefully.

If a system labels someone as unstable for years, isolates him, humiliates him, provokes him, destroys his relationships, blocks normal life, ignores his reports, discredits his evidence, and then increases the pressure whenever he becomes healthier, one possible end result is self-destruction.

That is not an accident.

It is one of the cleanest ways for a system to make a person disappear while avoiding accountability.

If the person dies, the same manufactured labels can be used afterward:

“He was unstable.”

“He was paranoid.”

“He had mental-health issues.”

“We tried to help him.”

“It was his behavior.”

Then nobody investigates the pressure that created the collapse.

Nobody investigates the provocations.

Nobody investigates the humiliation.

Nobody investigates the retaliation.

Nobody investigates the ignored evidence.

Nobody investigates the authority figures who direct and protect the mob.

Nobody investigates the people who push the button every day and then pretend the button does not exist.

That is why unofficial labels are so dangerous.

A person does not even need a real clinical history for the story to be planted.

The label can be created socially.

The label can be repeated publicly.

The label can be spread by family, police, schools, courts, psychology-connected people, and community members.

Then, if the person is destroyed, the label becomes the explanation.

That is the darkest form of cover-up.

Create the distress.

Create the isolation.

Create the humiliation.

Create the hopelessness.

Then call the final result mental illness.

That is not help.

That is an eradication pathway.

It removes the person and buries the method under the very narrative used to destroy him.

Fear-Mongering the Crowd

A system like this does not require every participant to understand the whole story.

Some people may believe the label.

Some may half-believe it.

Some may not care.

Some may enjoy the cruelty.

Some may think they are helping.

Some may think the end justifies the means.

Some may tell themselves:

“He is crazy, so this is allowed.”

“He is dangerous, so this is for safety.”

“He has a history, so we are doing the right thing.”

“If he reacts, that proves we were right.”

That is how fear-mongering recruits ordinary people.

The target is pre-labeled as dangerous, unstable, guilty, hateful, or defective. Once that label is accepted, people feel permitted to treat him in ways they would normally know are wrong.

They tease.

They provoke.

They repeat private information.

They laugh.

They report.

They participate.

They tell themselves it is for the greater good.

That is the psychology of mobs.

The crowd does not need proof if it has permission.

The label gives permission.

The fear gives permission.

The group gives permission.

And once the target reacts to being treated like prey, the crowd says:

“See? That is why we did it.”

That is the circular logic.

They fear-monger the crowd into shocking the target.

Then they use the target’s distress as proof that the fear-mongering was justified.

This is how a lie becomes social behavior.

Dissemination: Turning Every Fragment Into Public Shame

Another part of the machinery is dissemination.

Any fragment that can be used is instantly spread.

Any private detail becomes public material.

Any emotional reaction becomes gossip.

Any attempt to explain becomes “proof.”

Any attempt to defend yourself becomes “instability.”

Any attempt to document becomes “obsession.”

Any attempt to expose the pattern becomes “paranoia.”

This means the system is not gathering facts to learn the truth. It is gathering fragments to feed an echo chamber.

If the target says something in therapy, the fear is that it becomes public shame.

If the target explains himself to family, the fear is that it becomes another twisted story.

If the target writes online, the response is retaliation.

If the target documents, the response is intimidation.

If the target creates a paper trail, the pressure escalates.

That escalation reveals motive.

If the goal were truth, documentation would help.

If the goal were safety, evidence would clarify.

If the goal were healing, communication would matter.

But if the goal is cover-up, then documentation becomes dangerous.

That is why retaliation increases when the target starts creating a record.

The target is not being punished because he is wrong.

The target is being punished because he is becoming harder to erase.

Poisoning the World Around a Person

If the goal were help, the environment would be designed to help the person function.

But what happens when the environment is designed to do the opposite?

What happens when almost every human interaction becomes a provocation?

What happens when friends are not really friends, but collectors?

What happens when dates become traps?

What happens when public places become stages?

What happens when strangers repeat the same themes, same insults, same hints, same psychological triggers, jumping from person to person like a script?

That is not help.

That is social poisoning.

If someone truly believed another person needed help, they would not destroy every possible place where that person could heal, belong, work, date, create, relax, or prove the accusation false.

No one poisons every social environment because they want recovery.

They poison every social environment because they want no reentry.

That is not treatment.

That is exile.

The Impossibility of Cure for a Fake Problem

Here is the common-sense contradiction.

If there is no real clinical problem, then there is nothing to cure.

If the “problem” was invented by the people claiming to help, then treatment becomes impossible because the treatment is based on a lie.

You cannot be cured of someone else’s false accusation.

If a person is placed into a cage based on a fake story, then there is no path out, because the system is not measuring reality. It is measuring submission to the false story.

If you deny the label, they call it lack of insight.

If you object to the lie, they call it paranoia.

If you get angry about being trapped, they call it instability.

If you try to leave, they call it danger.

That is not medicine.

That is false-premise confinement.

That is a cage wearing a doctor’s coat.

The Moral Inversion

This is where the moral hypocrisy becomes impossible to ignore.

A family can go to temple.

A family can condemn the Holocaust.

A family can speak publicly against Nazis, fascism, cruelty, racism, oppression, and dehumanization.

But none of that matters if, inside its own life, it reproduces the same moral mechanism it claims to oppose.

The mechanism is dehumanization.

The mechanism is:

This person is less than us.

This person is dangerous.

This person is defective.

This person does not deserve normal rights.

This person does not deserve privacy.

This person does not deserve dignity.

This person does not deserve to be believed.

This person does not deserve to live freely.

That is the authoritarian impulse.

It is the same moral structure found in slavery, caste systems, concentration camps, political psychiatry, and every system where one group claims the right to define another person as subhuman, diseased, dangerous, or removable.

The comparison is not about identical historical scale.

It is about the shared mechanism.

A slave asks why he is being whipped.

The answer is more whipping.

An oppressed person asks why he is being hated.

The answer is more punishment.

A targeted person asks why the shocks will not stop.

The answer is more shocks.

Then the question itself is used against him.

He is resisting.

He is unstable.

He is paranoid.

He refuses help.

He does not understand his behavior.

That is the oldest trick of oppression.

Create the suffering, then criminalize the cry.

Create the cage, then call escape dangerous.

Create the fear, then call fear mental illness.

Create the isolation, then call isolation proof that the person is defective.

Create the anger, then call anger dangerousness.

From Animal Experiments to Human Social Control

The pattern is simple.

Create a controlled environment.

Apply repeated consequences.

Punish unwanted behavior.

Reward compliance.

Pair neutral things with fear.

Isolate the subject.

Create helplessness.

Label the subject.

Watch the reaction.

Call the reaction proof.

This is why the shock-collar example matters.

It shows the same logic in everyday form:

I do not like what you are doing.

I will cause pain.

You will learn.

But when applied to a child, a family, a school, a community, a police system, or a lifetime of public provocation, the same logic becomes monstrous.

The person is no longer being taught.

The person is being broken.

And when the person asks why the shocks will not stop, the question itself is punished.

That is not science.

That is not treatment.

That is not concern.

That is behavioral abuse wearing the language of psychology.

Why Start With a Five-Year-Old?

This is the question that exposes the motive.

Why begin with a five-year-old?

A five-year-old is barely developed.

A five-year-old does not have a criminal identity.

A five-year-old does not have a political position.

A five-year-old cannot deserve a lifelong system of psychological shocks, social labeling, surveillance, provocation, and punishment.

At most, a five-year-old may show anxiety, sensitivity, fear, frustration, awkwardness, curiosity, confusion, or ordinary childhood imperfection.

But ordinary childhood imperfection is not a justification for lifelong punishment.

So why exploit it?

Why take a child’s nervousness, confusion, warmth, social awkwardness, sensitivity, or imperfection and use it as the seed of a psychiatric story?

Why turn a child into a project?

Why turn a child into a suspect?

Why turn a child into something to be watched?

The answer cannot be “help.”

Help does not torture the child.

Help does not shock the child into distress.

Help does not create the condition it claims to treat.

Help does not punish the child for asking why.

Help does not follow the child into adulthood and attack every healthy behavior.

The motive has to be something else.

The motive is hostile control.

The deeper motive is removal.

The child is treated as a problem before the child has done anything to earn that role. That means the problem is not created by the child. The problem is created by the people assigning the role.

This is projection.

This is shame.

This is superiority.

This is fear.

This is the godlike belief that certain adults have the right to decide whether a child belongs in normal life at all.

And when adults with psychology backgrounds begin using psychological language to justify pain, the danger becomes extreme.

Because the pain is no longer called pain.

It is called correction.

The coercion is no longer called coercion.

It is called concern.

The cage is no longer called a cage.

It is called help.

That is the moral inversion.

The person causing harm claims to be the healer.

The person being harmed is called the problem.

That is why the five-year-old matters.

Because if the system begins before the child can possibly deserve the label, then the label was never an observation.

It was an intention.

The Family Psychology Behind the Machine

The family psychology is the engine.

The public story is concern.

The private behavior is domination.

A family that truly wants a child to live well does not poison his name before he reaches adulthood. It does not follow him from school to school, city to city, relationship to relationship, and decade to decade. It does not turn friends into collectors, dates into traps, teachers into monitors, and strangers into provokers.

That is not concern.

That is ownership.

The family appears to project its own shame, rage, fear, superiority, and hidden ugliness onto the child. The child becomes the container for everything the family refuses to face in itself.

Instead of saying, “Something is wrong in this family,” the family says:

“Something is wrong with him.”

That is the scapegoat mechanism.

But this goes beyond ordinary scapegoating because the family allegedly used psychological language and outside networks to export the label.

The child is not simply disliked.

The child is defined.

The child is not simply criticized.

The child is interpreted.

The child is not simply punished.

The child is converted into a story.

And once the story exists, the family needs the world to keep repeating it.

That is where motive becomes obvious.

If the person succeeds, the story weakens.

If the person makes friends, the story weakens.

If the person dates, the story weakens.

If the person works, the story weakens.

If the person creates, the story weakens.

If the person proves normal functioning, the story weakens.

So the system escalates.

Success is treated as a threat because success disproves the label.

That is why the motive cannot be help.

Real concern would be relieved by functioning. Real concern would say:

“Good, he is living his life.”

But hostile containment says:

“He is escaping the label. Increase pressure.”

That is the tell.

The more the target proves the story false, the angrier the system becomes.

That anger reveals the motive.

It was never about cure.

It was about control, punishment, and removal.

The Purpose of Never Stopping

If the purpose were correction, the punishment would stop when the person corrected the alleged behavior.

If the purpose were health, the pressure would stop when the person chose healthy behavior.

If the purpose were safety, the pressure would stop when the person walked away.

If the purpose were truth, the system would answer the question.

But if the button keeps being pushed no matter what the person does, then the button is not being used to correct behavior.

It is being used to create evidence.

The person is shocked until he reacts.

Then the reaction is called instability.

The person is isolated until he becomes exhausted.

Then the exhaustion is called illness.

The person is provoked until he gets angry.

Then the anger is called dangerousness.

The person is followed until he complains.

Then the complaint is called paranoia.

That is the motive.

Not cure.

Not concern.

Not family love.

Evidence production.

The system needs reactions, so it manufactures them.

It needs symptoms, so it creates distress.

It needs dangerousness, so it provokes anger.

It needs silence, so it threatens more shocks.

It needs the person to stop exposing the family, the institutions, and the people involved, so it teaches the person:

If you talk, we push the button.

But the cruelty is that the button is pushed anyway.

That means the purpose is not silence alone.

The purpose is damage.

The purpose is to grind the person down until the label finally appears true.

That is why the shock-collar model is the center of the entire story.

They push the button, create distress, erase the button, and call the distress proof.

The Constitutional Question

This is not only personal.

It is constitutional.

If a government, police department, school system, psychology-connected network, or public-private security culture can label a child as an unknown quantity, follow him, poison his reputation, provoke him, and try to manufacture dangerousness before he has actually done anything, then no citizen is safe.

If this can happen to one child, it can happen to another child.

If this can happen to one son, it can happen to someone else’s son.

If a person can be treated as guilty before conduct exists, then the Bill of Rights becomes decorative paper.

The United States was built around the idea that government power must be limited.

People came here, fought here, and built constitutional protections because unchecked power becomes tyranny.

You do not get to remove someone from society because you are afraid of what he might become.

You do not get to stalk someone because you do not understand him.

You do not get to punish someone because he is different.

You do not get to manufacture evidence because the facts are not enough.

You do not get to turn public life into a cage because a family, institution, police network, or crowd decided a person is undesirable.

That is not America.

That is exactly the kind of government tyranny constitutional rights were designed to prevent.

If the accusation is real, state it.

If the conduct is real, prove it.

If the danger is real, identify it.

If there is probable cause, present it.

But if the system requires rumors, hints, teasing, provocation, humiliation, strangers, staged interactions, and endless psychological shocks, then the system is not operating from law.

It is operating from fear.

The Question They Cannot Allow

This is why the questions are dangerous.

Who is doing this?

How is it being coordinated?

Who is paying for it?

Who is spreading the label?

Who first created the warning?

Who told strangers what to say?

Who told police what to expect?

Who told teachers how to interpret the child?

Who told communities that this person was dangerous?

Who benefits from the label?

Who is protected if the label stays alive?

Who is exposed if the label collapses?

Those questions are not paranoid.

Those are the exact questions any free citizen should ask when a pattern appears too large, too organized, too repetitive, and too impossible to be random.

The reason the system must call the questions mental illness is because the questions point toward responsibility.

If the target asks why one person is teasing him, that can be dismissed.

If the target asks why the same theme follows him into every public place, that threatens the whole operation.

If the target asks why the pattern started when he was a child, that threatens the family narrative.

If the target asks why police were prepared for a psychiatric reaction, that threatens the institutional narrative.

If the target asks why documentation created retaliation, that threatens the cover-up.

That is why the questions themselves become forbidden.

The system does not fear the target’s behavior.

The system fears the target’s explanation.

The Real Definition

So what is it?

It is not concern.

It is not treatment.

It is not ordinary family conflict.

It is not normal criticism.

It is not legitimate diagnosis.

It is:

control through micromanagement, expanded into a privately manufactured psychiatric smear, then amplified into authority-directed social and institutional eradication.

More fully:

It is a family-originated, police-monitored, psychology-directed, school-amplified, internet-expanded, judicially protected, pseudo-clinical social-eradication system in which tactics are allegedly supplied to private citizens, teachers, friends, community members, and public groups so they can stalk, provoke, humiliate, frame, and psychologically shock Kevin Perlman while ordinary behavior is collected, twisted, and broadcast as evidence of mental illness, dangerousness, hatred, guilt, or instability — all so Kevin Perlman can be isolated, discredited, confined, erased, or removed from normal life while the perpetrators call it concern.

That is the definition.

The Cover Story

The cover story is always polite.

“We are concerned.”

“He needs help.”

“It is his behavior.”

“He is unstable.”

“He is dangerous.”

“He has a history.”

“We are protecting people.”

“We are trying to do the right thing.”

But the conduct says something else.

The conduct says:

We will not leave you alone.

We will follow you.

We will collect on you.

We will twist everything.

We will poison your relationships.

We will make strangers participate.

We will provoke reactions.

We will call the reactions proof.

We will use the system against you.

We will keep doing it until you disappear.

And the authority layer says:

We will direct the tactic.

We will protect the actor.

We will not punish the people who do this.

We will not take your evidence seriously.

We will not treat your reports equally.

We will not protect you from the people we have sent or protected.

We will call your complaints proof that you are unstable.

That is not help.

That is punishment without trial.

That is custody without consent.

That is social execution disguised as concern.

The Final Point

If someone has to stalk, provoke, defame, isolate, fabricate, and poison every social environment to prove that a person is unstable, then they have already admitted the truth:

The instability was not found.

It had to be manufactured.

And if it had to be manufactured, then the person was never the original problem.

The people manufacturing it were.

That is why “it’s your behavior” is the oldest trick in the system.

They create the pressure.

They collect the reaction.

They erase the pressure.

They display the reaction.

Then they call the reaction proof.

But the bigger picture is clear.

This is not behavior correction.

This is not mental health.

This is not concern.

This is control through micromanagement, disguised as observation, expanded into social poisoning, and aimed at eradication.

They were not trying to cure a condition.

They were trying to create one.

And once they created enough distress, they tried to use that distress as the excuse for the cage.

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