Sunday, July 22, 2012

Who is David Dalsky (aka Dave Dalsky)? Associate professor at Kyoto University

Dave Dalsky is the most recent American to approach me and make untoward, basically hostile comments with a psychological warfare slant to them. That immediately gives rise to the suspicion that he is an officer in the CIA, probably connected to the network I've been breaking down.

David Dalsky has a BA in Psychology and PhD in social psychology. He's fairly well armed for psychological warfare.

I have reported him to the Osaka Consulate as yet another suspected CIA officer that has approach me and behaved in an untoward manner. That did modify his behavior; however, seeing as the some other aspects of the scenario remain the same, as others deteriorate further, it's time to go public with this account.

Update
http://interculturallab.weebly.com/about-the-professor.html (old and obsolete, and even the archived page is gone:https://web.archive.org/web/20170515105103/http://interculturallab.weebly.com/about-the-professor.html)
This is the current set of pages (as of July 2019):https://www.h.kyoto-u.ac.jp/en_f/faculty_f/162_dalsky_d_0/ https://www.interculturallab.com/david-dalsky-phd.htmlhttps://www.interculturallab.com/lab-members.htmlhttps://kyouindb.iimc.kyoto-u.ac.jp/j/oB2hM
I will have to post some archived material eventually...


I first encountered Dave at the riverside where I practice the shakuhachi and take my son to play. He was there with his daughter. I had come down with a particularly virulent cold, so wasn't playing the shakuhachi that day, just taking a walk to get some air and sunshine, enjoy the splendid nature that we are privileged to have so close to our home.

I mentioned to Dave that I was ill and didn't want to shake hands because had just been to the doctor and received two type of antibiotics, to which he responded with an comment to the effect that:
"oh, so it's curable."  
The comment was delivered in a manner such as to suggest that maybe it wouldn't be a curable common respiratory infection, but a terminal illness. Needless to say, it was an entirely untoward comment to make to someone you have just met for the first time and is very ill. I was immediately taken aback and put on my guard. I had been somewhat hopeful that his presence would either be simply that of a normal resident, or maybe even a more positive sign from the government of the United States of America.

Instead, he was another hostile CIA officer, with daughter in tow.

The next time I saw Dave was at the nursery school I had to sue the city in order to gain admission. Dave's daughter was only granted a one-day a week attendance at the school because it is crowded, and it seemed in order that I mention that I had been forced by circumstances to sue the city of Kyoto to get my son into the nursery school. 

That discussion worked its way around to the topic of history and Kyoto, I mentioned Marius Jansen's book on the Meiji Ishin, and offered to send David Dalsky and another guy whose daughter goes to the same nursery school a link. In another response--this time from both individuals--that seemed rather unusual, neither of them wanted to exchange email addresses. In retrospect, there are two possible reasons I can think of for that, which I will go into further below.

In conjunction with the discussion of the suit--and the mayor of the city's previous loss of two civil suits for illicitly supplying city funds to two organizations affiliated with organized crime groups (with which members of the CIA are colluding), I mentioned that I had been having problems with intelligence operatives that I had been compelled to report to the American Consulate and Department of Justice.  

He seemed to be caught off-guard when I mentioned intelligence operatives and the CIA, and I didn't see him again for a few weeks after that.


When he did show up, again along the banks of the Kamogawa river, his disposition was of a noticeably altered state, and after talking for a few minutes, during which he somehow issue of the or two the conversation shifted to Kyoto University and some problems he addressed relating a mental disorder with which he claimed to be afflicted; that is to say, he said that he was suffering from bipolar disorder. I offered my sympathies, and he started talking about his medications, saying that they helped take the edge off. He offered the medications to me, two or three different types, saying that they helped take the edge off. I responded that I needed my edge, and politely declined, but accepted a few pills from him when he insisted, saying that I would look them up on the Internet to see what they were. 

The conversation then turned to an episode that he described having at Kyoto University, where he mentioned that the name of an intramural sports team was "the gangsters" or something like that, and claimed that he had once pulled a fire alarm at school because he thought that the Chinese students in the next room were spying on him. He presented the story in a convincing manner, emoting a palpable degree of instability and edge, and I was concerned for a moment or two as to whether I was going to have to defend myself from a dangerously delusional individual, but also thought in the back of my mind that he was engaged in some sort of performance. 

I asked him why the Chinese students would want to be spying on him. He evinced a  sort of change of expression of recognition, saying, "that's just it, they weren't", I was delusional, or something to that effect. 

I then mentioned that there certainly were problems at Kyoto University, and described my experience in dealing with one Glenn Paquette, former associate professor of physics at Kyoto University in some detail. I explained how Mr. Paquette had been recruiting students with Burakumin and Korean backgrounds to work as agents for the CIA and had been deploying them against me in the Starbucks. 

At this point, Mr. Dalsky said something to insinuate that when I talked about the CIA and what not he thought that maybe I was demonstrating that I was out of touch with reality. I responded that I was certainly not delusional, and repeated that I had to resort to filing a complaint with the DOJ to have Mr. Paquette removed. 

Mr. Dalksy seemed to get reflective for a moment, and eventually asked that I return his medications, because they were expensive, and that his wife didn't give him much pocket money since they had bought a condominium. 

He then emphasized that he was "all in, man".

I don't know what to think about this scenario, but the likelihood that Dalsky was being deployed to use his expertise in psychology to make me think I was delusional because I thought that the CIA was intruding in my life and causing me tremendous grief and actual loss and damages is enough to motivate me to post this entry on the blog, and add Mr. David Dalsky to the list of CIA officers that have attempted to interfere with life here in Kyoto.

So, this post is a performative speech act of a sort, constituting, along with the several emails I've sent to the Osaka Consulate and the Special Litigation section of the Criminal Division of the DOJ an addition to the complaint that the DOJ has already attempted to brush under the rug, so to speak. 

The DOJ will face a civil complaint in relation to this issue, with the appearances of Mr. Eric Bray and Mr. David Dalsky--both with degrees in psychology--after the fact of the complaint and the issuance of the letter denying the complaint amounting to an egregious violation of the laws of the United States of America with the complicity of a negligent Department of Justice.

    


4 comments:

  1. May I ask what you do? You must have an awfully important and influential job to get that many CIA officers after you. You can't be too careful with the gov these days. More power to all you guys who keep them in check.

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  2. well, i'm a translator, but i also continue to do research in what amounts to social, and relates to religion and politics.
    i think that the reason i am such a target is because of my research in relation to modernity and identity, and the way that the conceptual framework of that theory plays out in japan with respect to the history of religion and politics.
    in particular, buddhism is important, as is confuciansim, versus nativism.
    the cia, as i mention in posts in the blog, would appear to be engaged in an internal "divide and conquer" strategy using religion as a primary tool to weaken the psychological constitution of people.
    once people are too weak to be able to interact in a productive manner to maintain the status of their society, society is more prone to succumbing to the powerful forces aligned against it.
    i don't mean to sound like a socialist, as i'm talking about democratic society, which depends on the ability of people to communicate effectively with each other in relation to the pertinent issues at hand, and elect competent representatives.
    there are various things undermining that social model, including consumerism, etc.
    what i'm addressing are the incidents i encounter in the cultural capital of a country whose cultural tradition is still largely intact thanks to prolonged periods of isolation and island defenses.
    those factors are no longer at play.

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  3. @ taro doe

    by the way, it is also the case that the yakuza have a substantial presence here in kyoto, and the freemasons in the cia and mi6 try to collaborate with them. most of the westerners in the intelligence services have no businesses being in a cultural center like kyoto, and neither do the yakuza.

    according to robert whiting (see the video to which i've posted a link), 60% of the yakuza are of burakumin extraction, 30% are ethnic koreans, and 10% are non-burakumin japanese.

    kyoto does have a substantial number of burakumin and koreans. the cia collaborates with these people to try and make it look like they are successful, in part by presenting a public image of being associated with american or british low-brow culture, which is why there are numerous sports bars and uk style pubs here that don't seem to do a viable business.

    japanese call such people "yankees" (ヤンキー?), which is funny. you can see quite a few stores in unexpected places trying to sell inexpensive american goods, even here in kyoto. again, they don't seem to do a viable business, so they must be yakuza front companies, and the connection with the usa is conspicuous.

    some of the businesses evince a connection to los angeles, in particular, where there is a large population of japanese and where korean organized crime groups are based in the usa.

    it is ludicrous that such people would be trying to undertake such nonsense in kyoto, but that just shows the mentality they embody, and reflects very poorly on the cia and mi6.

    anyway, i am interested in japanese history and culture, even though i'm an america, and since i am hip to the cia and mi6 people that the yakuza want to collaborate with, i short-circuit that sociopathic combination, and that is why these people are continually trying to get me to leave kyoto.

    dealing with the situation is why i started this blog.

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