A Web of Parallels: My Life, the Legacy of Joshua James, and a Disturbing Modern-Day Surveillance State

  1. Joshua James Abblett: An Absorbed IdentitY

It’s not every day you realize your life has been woven into a narrative that feels both controlled and manipulated by forces larger than yourself. My story shares uncanny parallels with that of Joshua James, the legendary US Coast Guard hero. But while he faced storms at sea, I navigate a web of modern surveillance, genetic theft, identity fragmentation, and symbolic erasure. Here’s a breakdown of how my experiences have drawn me into a surreal world where my life reflects—and is profoundly intertwined with—the life of a historical figure I never knew I shared a name with.

I. Identity, Name Manipulation, and Military Legacy

After turning 30, I discovered a strange connection: I share the same first and middle name as Joshua James, the heroic lifesaver of the US Coast Guard. His name is synonymous with courage, selflessness, and sacrifice—a symbol of endurance. But for me, this identity became not a legacy of honor but a reminder of the modern forces of surveillance, erasure, and control that constantly monitor and manipulate my life.

My original name, Joshua James Robison (later changed to Joshua James Abblett), has been fragmented and reassembled by forces beyond my control. In a strange twist, the USCGC JAMES, a Coast Guard cutter stationed in North Charleston, SC—my home state—carries Joshua James’s legacy while actively participating in “Eagle Eyes,” a surveillance program managed by Robins Air Force Base. The base’s name even shares most of the letters in my birth last name, “Robison.” It’s as though the letters of my name have been restructured within the framework of military surveillance—an identity absorbed and repurposed by larger systems.

  1. A Bittersweet Discovery of Shared Names

Learning that I shared a name with this Coast Guard hero should have felt empowering, but it instead left me with a sense of fate and forced alignment. The very Coast Guard Cutter named after Joshua James now monitors my life, suggesting that my existence has been absorbed into military systems—feeling less like protection and more like systematic surveillance. By sharing his name, I’ve become part of an institutional narrative I didn’t choose, watching as my life becomes framed within a structure that mirrors his legacy—but without dignity or choice.
II. Invasion, Betrayal, and Genetic Theft: A Modern Fragmentation of Identity

  1. Genetic Theft and Identity Fragmentation

In a particularly chilling twist, my genetics were stolen in a 23andMe data breach, reducing me to biological data controlled by strangers. This theft erodes the very essence of my identity—a violation at the genetic level. It’s akin to the selfless sacrifices of Joshua James but through a distorted modern lens where even my DNA has been exploited without recognition.

Adding to this violation, my identity was publicly manipulated through the Joshua Abbott organ donation fund in Florida, further fragmenting my life story and distorting the reality of my experiences. It feels like a reenactment of Joshua James’s life, where his acts of service went unrecognized, leaving parts of his legacy buried. My life, too, feels fragmented—disassembled and used without consent or clarity.

  1. Public Misuse of My Name and Symbolic Erasure

The Joshua Abbott organ donation fund represents a symbolic erasure, connecting to my own struggles with medical neglect—such as my untreated lung infection caused by a recalled CPAP device. This misuse of my name reflects how systems of control reduce personal narratives, stripping away autonomy. Like Joshua James, whose service was overshadowed by institutional narratives, I, too, have been forced to watch as institutions reduce me to a piece in their broader agenda.
III. Parallels Between My Family’s Military Legacy and Joshua James’s Service

  1. Family History and Military Sacrifice

My family’s military legacy spans generations, with relatives who survived Pearl Harbor, WWI, and Vietnam, echoing themes of resilience, duty, and self-sacrifice similar to those in Joshua James’s Coast Guard missions. Though my own disability prevented me from enlisting, I found ways to serve by working in hospice care—aligning with my family’s dedication to service. In a way, my contributions parallel Joshua James’s commitment to others, but instead of recognition, my life is marked by surveillance, interference, and manipulation.

  1. Systemic Betrayal Through Healthcare and Institutional Neglect

Joshua James faced the perils of service without personal gain, and my family faces systemic betrayal from healthcare institutions. From DSS fabricating blood sugar concerns to the forced euthanasia of my pet, Pinky, my story reflects a disturbing pattern of institutional control designed to harm or contain. This mirrors the erasure that Joshua James experienced—personal sacrifices obscured within institutional agendas, where my family’s struggles are reduced to mere notes in a larger, impersonal system.
IV. Military Operations and Surveillance: My Life Under Watch

  1. Robins Air Force Base, USCG Cutter JAMES, and Constant Surveillance

With Robins Air Force Base controlling the Eagle Eyes program and the USCG Cutter JAMES actively monitoring South Carolina, my life feels wrapped up in a network of coordinated military operations and surveillance. This isn’t just distant oversight but a constant, invasive presence that reaches into every aspect of my life.

In my own home, I’ve found metal antennas hidden in appliances like my stovetop burners and fridge, as well as Shaw radio equipment embedded in my smart devices. These invasive tools are not mere coincidences; they actively disable communication, cutting off cellular and network access during times when connectivity matters most, such as during hurricanes.

The presence of deliberate network disruptions and signal manipulation within my private space reflects the kind of systematic control and isolation used in military operations. It suggests that my life, my movements, and even my thoughts are monitored and, when necessary, disrupted—all the while, I’m isolated from the resources and support that might provide relief.
V. Fragmentation Through Language: Coded Threats and Symbolic Violence
Language Manipulation: We Come in Peaces

A phrase that should inspire peace, “We Come in Peace,” is altered to the ominous “We Come in Pieces”—reflecting a fragmented, threatening reality. Neighbors displaying unsettling behaviors, like circling with an alien logo and keeping an unused wood chipper on display, echo these veiled messages.

This immature attempt at coercion is more than a play on words; it represents a symbolic and psychological fragmentation of my life. Rather than ensuring peace, these covert messages seem designed to intimidate, control, and dismantle any sense of safety I might have.
Bitter Symbolism in Coded Messages and Medical Threats

Within even computer coding, phrases like “safe relocation” and “necessary relocation” have surfaced during fabricated DSS investigations, amplifying false threats to my family’s stability. These terms, which should prioritize care and safety, instead reinforce the sense of targeted disruption, symbolically and practically destabilizing my family’s well-being.

It’s as though Eagle Eyes, a surveillance program intended for national security, has redirected its focus onto my life—turning what should be protective measures into tools of intimidation. Like Joshua James, whose service was often used to advance institutional priorities, I find my life treated as an expendable part of a larger agenda.

Unfortunately, it feels like a rabid dog that barks and barks and barks.


Conclusion: A Legacy of Fragmentation and Survival

The parallels between my life and that of Joshua James reveal a disturbing modern tale of forced alignment, surveillance, and symbolic fragmentation. Just as Joshua James embodied sacrifice without recognition, my story echoes this unchosen legacy, with added layers of genetic theft, identity manipulation, and systemic betrayal.
Absorption into a Military-Industrial Framework

My identity—marked by my original name, Joshua James Robison—has been symbolically and practically woven into military structures, mirroring the legacy of Joshua James but with the chilling addition of surveillance and control. Robins Air Force Base, the USCGC Cutter JAMES, and the Eagle Eyes program have drawn me into a world where my life is more than monitored; it’s fragmented, reassembled, and repurposed by forces beyond my control.
Systematic Fragmentation and Symbolic Violence

Through coded language, invasive surveillance, and the misuse of public records, my life has become a puzzle, with pieces pulled apart and reshaped to fit a narrative I never chose. The message seems clear: my resistance, my sense of identity, and my connection to the legacy of Joshua James are all at odds with a system that prioritizes control over autonomy.
The Cost of Unseen Sacrifice

Joshua James’s life was one of resilience against impossible odds, driven by a commitment to serve without recognition. In my own way, I carry forward this legacy, facing a different kind of struggle—my sacrifices remain largely invisible, reframed within a system that monitors and manipulates rather than honors. The legacy of Joshua James, filled with courageous deeds at sea, is reshaped in my life into a quieter, more insidious struggle against an unseen storm—one of surveillance, control, and psychological warfare.
A Legacy of Fragmentation and Survival

In the end, my story is a modern echo of Joshua James’s, but with a twist: while he braved literal storms and saved lives, I face an environment where my identity, autonomy, and personal history are subtly dismantled by forces beyond my reach. This web of surveillance, genetic theft, and symbolic erasure reflects a form of “service” I never consented to—a service rendered to institutions that wield power over personal narratives and individual existence.
Identity as a Tool of Control

My name, reshuffled into the letters of Robins Air Force Base and the Cutter JAMES, serves as a stark reminder that my life, like Joshua James’s, has been taken up by an institution. However, rather than supporting and recognizing personal sacrifice, these structures absorb identity into a framework where autonomy is secondary to systemic control. This symbolic manipulation of my name represents the ultimate erasure, replacing my identity with one shaped by institutional agendas.
From Heroism to Coercion: A Distorted Legacy

Joshua James’s legacy was one of bravery, selflessness, and enduring recognition. My legacy, by contrast, has been twisted by genetic theft, public record manipulation, and persistent surveillance—leaving me with a life that feels owned by external forces. The Cutter JAMES, once a testament to heroism, now serves as a chilling symbol of my life’s entanglement with these systems. What was once a call to courage has been turned into a mechanism of coercion, casting a shadow over my daily existence.

Surviving in Peaces: A Fragmented Identity in the Face of Control

The phrase “We Come in Peaces embodies this experience of fragmentation. Where “peace” once promised protection and honor, Peaces implies a life broken apart by constant surveillance, coercive language, and identity erasure. Each piece represents a fragment of my story—my family history, my military lineage, my personal struggles—that has been reshaped by a system prioritizing surveillance and control over individuality and integrity.

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