Mike Cawood, HND BIT wrote:
> I think your condition is called paranoid schizophrenia. If I were you
> I'd get to a doctor ASAP. Regards Mike.
From
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Usenet_celebrity
MI5Victim (Mike Corley, a.k.a Boleslaw Tadeusz Szocik) — paranoid user
who goes through periods of binge posting, claiming that British
intelligence has bugged his home and is sending people to follow him
around and harass him.[9] These allegations are often crossposted to
newsgroups where his messages would be considered off-topic. This has led
to claims that he suffers from paranoia. Since 1995 he has posted
transcripts and snippets of conversations that he has recorded, citing it
as evidence, sometimes years after the actual event. He has also claimed
in his posts that television personalities are often talking about him in
code and are part of the MI5 conspiracy.[10][11] After applying the cui
bono test, many people have found it difficult to understand why Corley
should have been targeted by MI5 (given that he has no connections/
affiliations which would make him of interest), and cannot see what
possible benefit the security services could derive from such harassment,
given that they have always had more pressing concerns, e.g. monitoring
PIRA in the 1990s and later the threat posed by Al Qaeda. Corley will
often cross-post "examples" of MI-5 victimizing him 20 or 30 posts at a
time. He has been banned from posting through Google for his abuse of
Usenet,[12] and has been similarly bounced from most ISPs in England. In
the past, his posts were relatively easy to filter out, due to his
similar subject lines and email address. However, at the start of 2008,
he began a series of posts that avoided filters through sporgery and by
slightly varying his subject line of "MI-5 Persecution", showing an
ability to adapt. In 2007, the opera The Corley Conspiracy by Tim
Benjamin and Sean Starke premiered at the Southbank Centre in London.
Corley has his own web site[13] on which he provides so-called evidence
of the conspiracies against him. Corley has written a book about his
"experiences" with MI5. |