Who are the big spy bosses in Alaska?
Who is spying on us? Why are they so hostile to us?
The Psychology of Espionage
by Dr. Ursula M. Wilder, Studies in Intelligence, Vol. 61, No. 2.
People spy on both sides of the war. You can ask for loyalty or moral justification to join whichever side of the war, whatever war it is, but the tools and weapons of tradecraft, statecraft, espionage and general warfare are just that. Tools and weapons. Skills of observation, reporting, and evading detection or capture by the enemy. There is war and treason, however the psychologists want to spin the moral justification of it.
Don't make enemies you don't need to be making.
And Jesus said unto him, Forbid him not: for he that is not against us is for us [Luke 9:50].
And don't compromise with the enemy, either, the contrapositive and logical equivalent of Jesus’ statement being, “He that is not for us is against us.”
Compromised individuals are placed in key positions of local political power, public service and customer service
Police officers, firefighters, mayors, judges, librarians, gas station attendants, grocery store clerks etc. in small towns are the ones generally compromised.
Certain individuals have been placed in key positions where can observe and report all movements and activities of targeted individuals, in the course of their cover employment at day jobs, or shift work or “vanilla jobs” to use the vulgar Onlyfans terminology.
They become very angry of course when the cover is blown on their activities of hostile espionage and organized crime. Who bought exactly how much gasoline when and where are they driving? Spies have been hired to operate in our territory and answer those questions for our enemies.
It's a typical Israeli strategy but certainly also used by Israel’s enemies such as Iran throughout the United States. The pernicious attitude of “Why can’t we all just be friends?” is a strong indicator not only of hostile espionage but of hostile military action and violence to follow.
Those individuals in key positions of power (or of mere observation) are of course not really our friends, and when their cover of espionage is blown, they turn to openly hostile tactics of overtly abusing their power to harass targeted individuals and obstruct our daily activities.



Alexander Dolitsky The writer was raised in the former Soviet Union before settling in the U.S. in 1978. He moved to Juneau in 1986 where he has taught Russian studies at the University of Alaska, Southeast. From 1990 to 2022, he served as director and president of the Alaska-Siberia Research Center, publishing extensively in the fields of anthropology, history, archaeology, and ethnography.
The corruption goes all the way up to the governor’s mansion in Juneau, and Russian and Israeli spies have perpetrating an extremely hostile military occupation of Alaska, compromising nearly all locally based military authorities as well as state law enforcement and first responder agencies.

