That's a picture from today of messages that people have sent to one of my past YouTube blogs, "Lena Kochman Boston."
I reported "Hoe Slapper" to YouTube the first time that he sent me messages. Although YouTube denied my appeal that a video that I published at "Please don't kill me," of a U.S. Postal Service worker who had coughed at me, be restored and the strike against my blog removed, YouTube seems to have taken no action against "Hoe Slapper." What kind of "Community Guidelines" are violated by a woman quietly filming a man who has harassed and possibly also stalked her, warning him twice that he's being recorded, while those guidelines aren't violated by someone who calls his channel "Hoe Slapper"?
Why are there so many people who are not medical professionals who think that they can detect when someone's mental health is "deteriorating"? In which videos does Mr. Baldwin think that I acted "more sane," the ones in which I yelled at U.S. Postal Service, FEDEX and UPS workers to STOP STALKING ME? Those videos are the basis of much of the Internet ridicule of me; many of them got taken from my blogs, despite my having copyrighted them, and spliced together by people who republished them at their own blogs and YouTube channels, specifically to ridicule me as being mentally ill.
That's a picture of one of the results from the first page of search results from a Google search from today of "lena kochman."
That's the Web address for that blog.
Those are pictures from today of some of the messages that people wrote to that hateblog about me. The blog and the messages are almost a couple of years old.
These are pictures of the email response that I got from reddit when I asked that the reddit pages that people had published about me be removed from the Internet:
Even among mental health professionals, the diagnosis of mental illness is arbitrary and subjective more often than not.
That's the Web address of the last video that I published at YouTube last night, at my current YouTube blog, "The railing is too low at the library." It shows two UPS trucks and several male, UPS drivers standing around talking across the street from the Pine Street Inn when I was walking to the shelter.
The stalking of me by U.S. Postal Service, FEDEX and UPS drivers seems to have gotten worse since YouTube deleted a video that I published several days ago of a Postal Service worker who had sexually harassed me. YouTube said that the content of the video was "inappropriate." YouTube wasn't saying that the Postal Service employee had done something inappropriate; YouTube said that I was inappropriate for filming him after he harassed me and for talking about what had happened, even though I never raised my voice, swore, or said or did anything that was at all inappropriate.
YouTube, like the rest of the misogynist world, thinks it's appropriate for men to abuse women and inappropriate for women to object to being abused.
Copyright, with noted exceptions, L. Kochman, January 8, 2016 @ 9:15 a.m.












