By Joshua Elijah Forde
š Filed: July 8, 2025 | ā° 3:37 PM HST
š JoshFordeShow.Com | š§ WMIRecords.Com | š CoconutKingdomFamily.Com | š TheWinnersClub.us
āļøš”
Protecting My Peace, Health, and Creative Freedom
I, Joshua Elijah Forde, am formally documenting and protecting myself from an ongoing, repeating pattern of interference, surveillance, discrimination, and digital manipulation ā all of which impact my:
š Right to live peacefully
š¼ Right to operate legal business
𩺠Right to manage my health
š”ļø Right to be free from targeted harassment or bias
šļøāšØļøš
What Most People Donāt Realize
These problems go far beyond occasional noise or neighbor drama. In 2025, technology enables real-time monitoring, behavioral pattern tracking, and remote surveillance ā often by people right next door, above, below, or even posing as āfriends.ā
š± If youāre reading or writing this post on your phone, people with access to hacked networks, device mirroring, or AI-based social engineering can literally watch, screenshot, or analyze what you write ā as you write it.
They can track your mood, your schedule, and even your private health searches.
This is happening to thousands across the world, and I refuse to let it remain hidden or ignored in my own life.
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Key Patterns and Real-World Tactics Iām Facing
šš ļø
Noise Harassment & Environmental Stress
Sudden drilling, banging, vent vibrations, or repeated loud music
Often timed to important calls, rest hours, or moments of focus
Sound can be weaponized ā not just by neighbors, but sometimes by staff or tech-enabled outsiders
š”š¤³
Surveillance, Device Tapping, & AI Monitoring
Smart devices (TVs, phones, speakers) may be tapped or mirrored without consent
AI tools can scan your voice, facial expression, and typing speed for āemotional analysisā
Real-time monitoring: people may watch you type and read this very message, track your response time, or analyze whoās nearby
š¤šļø
Studying Patterns and Manipulating Behavior
Some individuals record your habits: when you wake up, what you write, where you shop, or even who visits your home
People can create psychological ātriggersā to see how youāll react (sound, text, image, or behavior cues)
Even well-meaning āfriendsā can be pressured, bribed, or manipulated to report on you or participate
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Unpaid Debts, Financial Gaslighting, and Drama
Iāve invested my time, work, and money for others ā many refuse to repay whatās owed, then create distractions, false stories, or outright ghosting
Unjust enrichment is a legal issue, but itās also a tool for emotional control
š¼š
Business & Platform Interference
Content suppressed, sales delayed, site traffic blocked, and accounts shadowbanned or āauto-flaggedā
AI-driven moderation and manual reporting can be weaponized by individuals or cliques to limit my reach or silence my work
š šļø
Modern Redlining & Housing Discrimination
Rules enforced unevenly, especially against those who speak up, create, or stand out
Preferential treatment to homeowners, financial gatekeepers, or those with connections
Management often ignores, delays, or retaliates against valid complaints
šš¤¦
Social Sabotage, Isolation, and Community Manipulation
Trusted connections (friends, clients) influenced to distance themselves or act hostile
āGroupthinkā pressure, subtle rumors, and emotional games to make you question yourself
Some people purposely create public scenes, drama, or confusion to divert attention from the real problems
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Direct Impact on My Health
Noise, stress, and digital harassment worsen my existing health needs
Documented research: Chronic stress raises risk for hypertension, insomnia, anxiety, and other illnesses
Stable housing = better health ā this is a basic human right, not a luxury
āš¾š«
Discrimination, Racism & Unconscious Bias
Disparities in service, coded language, dismissiveness, or microaggressions
Covert redlining: tech-enabled, hidden behind āpolicyā or digital excuses
Equal rights in housing, business, and peace are not negotiable
šµļøāāļøā ļø
Impersonation, Fraud & Digital Identity Theft
Fake accounts, false claims of affiliation, or attempts to impersonate my business or music brands
Anyone doing this is committing fraud and will be pursued legally
š
Legal Rights & Public Documentation
I am protected by:
šļø Fair Housing Act (42 U.S.C. § 3604)
š°ļø Federal Wiretap & Digital Privacy Laws
āš¾ Civil Rights Act (Title VI & VII)
š”ļø Tortious Interference and Emotional Distress Laws
š FTC & Debt Collection Protections
š Universal Declaration of Human Rights
𩺠Americans with Disabilities Act (if health is impacted)
š¼ All legal business registrations and intellectual property laws
All evidence is being:
Time-stamped and archived ā³
Recorded (audio/video/screenshots) š¤šø
Reviewed by legal counsel šØāāļø
Logged for future legal action š”ļø
š
Immediate Public and Legal Demands
ā Pay what you owe ā financial respect is non-negotiable
ā Stop digital surveillance and unauthorized monitoring
ā End noise harassment and targeted drama
ā Guarantee equal and unbiased housing rights
ā Investigate and eliminate all forms of discrimination and redlining
ā Respect my right to heal, create, and operate a legal business in peace
šš¾
A Final Word ā For Anyone Watching or Listening
To those reading over my shoulder, digitally tracking, or waiting for a reaction:
I know whatās happening. You are now officially documented.
No amount of tech, wealth, or gossip will change the truth ā it only exposes it.
To those who stand with integrity, inclusion, and real support:
Thank you for your loyalty, courage, and honesty.
āYou canāt surveil your way out of justice. You canāt redline spirit.
And you canāt erase the voice of someone who never chose silence.ā
ā Joshua Elijah Forde
ā
Stay Connected, Stay Protected
š JoshFordeShow.Com
š§ JoshFordeMusic.Com
š TheWinnersClub.us
š This is a formal, time-stamped legal and public record
š Filed: July 8, 2025 | 3:37 PM HST
š¢
Tags for Visibility, Justice, and Awareness
ProtectJoshuaElijahForde #StopSurveillance #DigitalRedlining #DiscriminationAwareness
LegalHousingProtection #PayWhatYouOwe #HealthIsWealth #FairHousingAct
WMIRecords #CoconutKingdomFamily #TheWinnersClub #NoToGossip #TruthIsProof
Picture this: Iām pacing my apartment at 2 PM and the floor vibrates with the persistent rumble of drills from below. Just last year, I thought noisy neighbors were a punchline. Turns out, they can be an everyday realityāand not just a minor inconvenience but something that can mess with your health, your study habits, and your sense of peace. This journey into the daily grind of apartment noise is part confession, part public service. And, sureāsometimes I take a detour, but so does the drilling.
1. Life Above the Drills: The Emotional Toll of Apartment Noise
Apartment living brings with it a unique set of challenges, but few are as persistent or as emotionally draining as ongoing noise disturbances. For the past two years, my daily reality has been shaped by the relentless sound of drillingāsometimes subtle, sometimes so intrusive it feels like a deliberate attempt to test my sanity. āEvery time I walk, they're drilling below me.ā Thatās not an exaggeration; itās a routine. The pattern is so consistent that Iāve started to feel as if the walls themselves are listening, reacting to my every move.
At first, I tried to brush it off. After all, apartment living comes with its fair share of noiseāneighbors moving furniture, kids running down the halls, the occasional maintenance project. But this was different. The drilling seemed to follow me, echoing beneath my feet as I moved from room to room. It wasnāt just random construction; it felt targeted, almost like a tactic designed to disrupt my quiet enjoyment of my own home.
Over time, the emotional toll became impossible to ignore. Thereās a subtle but powerful shift that happens when persistent noise invades your space. At first, itās irritationāa background hum that you try to tune out. But as the days turn into weeks, and weeks into months, that irritation morphs into something heavier. Sleep becomes elusive. Concentration slips away. Even simple tasks like studying or relaxing start to feel like uphill battles. The noise isnāt just in the air; itās under your skin.
I started documenting everything. āIt's been happening for like the last two years to be exact. And I've been documenting it, especially today. It's July eight, twenty twenty five.ā The date stands out because it marks yet another day when the promise of peace was broken by the sound of drills. I recorded the times, the patterns, even the specific locationsāalways below, always in sync with my movements. Itās a strange feeling, becoming the person who keeps a log of every rumble and bang, but research shows that consistent documentation is essential when dealing with persistent noise issues. Without a record, complaints can be dismissed or ignored by housing management.
Speaking of management, their response has been a lesson in frustration. On paper, tenants have a right to quiet enjoymentāa basic expectation that your home will be a place of rest, not a source of stress. In reality, managementās promises often dissolve into vague assurances and endless āwork orders.ā Iāve spoken to workers, seen them come and go, but the noise never truly stops. Sometimes itās āprofessional,ā sometimes not. Either way, the effect is the same: a constant reminder that my comfort is at the mercy of othersā priorities.
Thereās a fine line between necessary maintenance and what Iāve come to think of as torturous interference. When does fixing a pipe or updating wiring cross over into harassment? For me, it was the moment the drilling became daily, the moment it started to feel like a strategy rather than a necessity. Iāve even wondered if certain individuals are targeted more than othersāa suspicion thatās hard to prove, but impossible to shake when the noise seems so personal.
The building itselfāreferred to as āthe building of two e elevenāāhas its own dynamics. Noise doesnāt just come from below; it seeps in from the sides, from behind, from every direction. Sometimes itās the work of professionals, other times itās just neighbors going about their business. But when the disturbances become a daily occurrence, and when management fails to act, the sense of isolation grows. You start to wonder if anyone else hears what you hear, or if youāre alone in your frustration.
In my case, the situation has even raised health concerns. Old apartments often contain asbestos, and drilling into concrete can release harmful particles into the air. Itās not just about noise anymore; itās about safety. Iāve reached out to management, documented every incident, and even considered contacting local authorities. Studies indicate that tenants facing persistent noise disturbances should not only document their experiences but also seek support from local agencies or tenant advocacy groups. After all, housing management is responsible for enforcing lease terms and ensuring a livable environment.
Living with persistent noise is more than an inconvenienceāitās an emotional and physical challenge that tests your patience, your resilience, and your sense of home. I never thought Iād be the person who tracks every sound, but here I am, hoping that by sharing my story, others will feel less alone in their own battles for quiet enjoyment.
2. When Noise Becomes a Health Hazard: Unseen Risks Lurking Beneath the Surface
Living in an apartment complex, you quickly learn that noise is part of the package. The thud of footsteps overhead, the hum of a neighborās TV, the occasional late-night argumentāthese are familiar sounds for anyone whoās experienced apartment living. But sometimes, the noise isnāt just an annoyance. Sometimes, it signals something far more serious lurking beneath the surface. Thatās when noise complaints turn into real concerns about health risks, especially in older buildings where the walls and floors may be hiding more than just echoes.
Asbestos Drilling: Is Drilling Old Concrete a Silent Threat?
Recently, I found myself documenting a situation that went far beyond the usual noise complaints. I was minding my own business, trying to study, when the sound of drilling started echoing through the building. At first, it was just another distractionāone of those ātorturesā apartment dwellers know all too well. But then I remembered: these are old apartments. The kind built decades ago, when asbestos was a common material in construction.
Thatās when the real worry set in. Drilling into old concrete isnāt just about the racket. Itās about what might be released into the air. Asbestos fibers, invisible to the naked eye, can become airborne when disturbed. If inhaled, they pose serious health risks. The thought kept running through my mind: Is this just noise, or is it something much more dangerous?
"If these are all old apartments with asbestos built into it and you're drilling into the floor and or the ceiling, you could then be causing people in the community health issues and harm to their health."
Why Unseen Health Risks Matter as Much as the Noise Itself
Itās easy to dismiss noise as a mere inconvenienceāsomething to be tolerated or solved with a pair of earplugs. But when that noise comes from unauthorized drilling, especially in older buildings, itās not just about annoyance. Itās about exposure. Research shows that while excessive noise can lead to stress, sleep loss, and other health complaints, the risks from asbestos drilling are far more insidious. You might not see or smell asbestos, but the damage it causes can last a lifetime.
Health Risks: Asbestos exposure is linked to serious diseases like mesothelioma, lung cancer, and asbestosis. These conditions often develop years after exposure, making the threat easy to overlook until itās too late.
Community Impact: For neighbors with existing health issuesālike asthma or other respiratory conditionsāthe risk is even greater. Unauthorized drilling doesnāt just disturb the peace; it can compromise the health of the entire community.
Neighbors May Be Annoyed, But Long-Term Exposure Can Mean Real Health Problems
Iāve heard people say, āItās just noiseāget over it.ā But thatās missing the point. Noise complaints in apartment living arenāt always about volume. Sometimes, theyāre a warning sign. When drilling shakes the walls, itās not just the sound that travels. Dust, debris, and potentially hazardous materials can spread through vents and cracks, reaching every corner of the building.
Studies indicate that noise disturbances are linked with increased stress, sleep disturbances, and even cardiovascular issues. But when you add the possibility of asbestos exposure, the stakes rise dramatically. What starts as a simple complaint about drilling can quickly escalate into a serious health concern for everyone in the building.
Not All Hazards Are Noisy or ObviousāSome Creep Up on You Over Years
The scariest risks are the ones you canāt see or hear. Asbestos doesnāt announce itself with a loud bang. It drifts silently, settling into carpets, clinging to curtains, and lingering in the air long after the drilling stops. The effects may not show up immediately, but over years, they can cause irreversible harm.
Apartment living comes with its own set of challenges, but when noise complaints reveal deeper health risks, itās time to take notice. Whether itās the stress of constant disturbances or the hidden dangers of asbestos drilling, the unseen risks can be just as damaging as the ones you hear every day.
3. Power, Accountability, and Community: Why Every Complaint (and Conversation) Matters
Living in an apartment isnāt just about sharing wallsāitās about sharing responsibility, too. Over the past two years, Iāve learned firsthand how noise complaints can turn into a full-time job for residents, especially when apartment management sends mixed messages or simply doesnāt act. Itās a strange feeling, being the unofficial noise complaint hotline for your building. But when neighbors keep coming to you, asking why nothingās changing, you realize something deeper is at play.
I started documenting everythingārecordings, videos, even conversations with management and HUD officials. This wasnāt just for me. It was for everyone in my building who felt unheard. When management tells you, āWeāll fix it, but only for a little while,ā itās hard not to feel like the problems are just being swept under the rug. And when those problems drag on for months or even years, trust in apartment management erodes. Research shows that landlords are responsible for enforcing lease terms and addressing noise issues, even when itās other tenants causing the disruption. But too often, the burden falls on us, the residents.
Whatās wild is how quickly rumors and unconventional tactics can spread. Iāve seen people try to pay others through Cash App just to create more noiseāyes, Cash App disruptions are a real thing in some buildings. It sounds unbelievable, but when youāre trying to study or just get some peace, these distractions add up. And when management isnāt responsive, the community steps in. Thatās how you end up with neighbors messaging you at all hours, asking, āHow come itās so noisy over here?ā or āWho do I have to talk to?ā At some point, you have to ask yourself:
āIf all my neighbors been complaining to me and Iām not the manager, yeah, I gotta say whatās up, bro. Why is everybody complaining to me and Iām not the manager?ā
I never wanted to be the manager. But when youāre the one everyone trusts, you canāt just ignore it. So I started vlogging these incidents, not to stir up drama, but to show what weāre really dealing with. The response was bigger than I expectedāhundreds, sometimes thousands of people watching, sharing their own stories, and offering support. Social media became a tool for community support and accountability, especially when management seemed to minimize or deflect our concerns. Studies indicate that documenting noise complaints with evidenceārecordings, written correspondence, even videoāis crucial for resolving disputes and holding both individuals and management accountable.
Thereās something powerful about community support. When all my āreal onesā in the building are already complaining, I know Iām not alone. Some neighbors are older or just donāt want to speak up, so I do it for them. Sometimes itās the women in the building who say, āItās too loud over here.ā Sometimes itās just people who want to live in peace. Weāre not trying to create extra drama; we just want to enjoy our homes. Thatās what apartment living should be about.
But the reality is, not everyone knows their rights. Many residents donāt realize they have a right to quiet enjoyment, or that local noise ordinances exist to protect them. Sometimes, management creates unnecessary work orders just to look busy, but the real issues remain. If youāre lucky enough to live in a house, remember: apartment dwellers pay rent every month, and they deserve respect, too. If you work in apartment management and go home to a quiet house, count your blessingsāand help those who donāt have that luxury.
At the end of the day, every complaint and every conversation matters. Whether itās a neighbor venting about noise at midnight or a viral video calling out management, itās all about accountability and community support. We shouldnāt have to rely on rumors, ego, or money to get peace in our homes. We just need management to listen, neighbors to support each other, and everyone to remember: weāre all in this together. If youāre dealing with noise complaints, document everything, reach out for help, and donāt be afraid to speak up. Because when walls have ears, itās up to us to make sure our voices are heard.