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AI is Already Turning People into Pseudo-Religious Nutjobs & Destroying Marriages

The race for artificial intelligence (AI) keeps getting more bonkers by the day. Parents need to know about these problems in order to prevent catastrophes in their families.

That’s no exaggeration. Adults using AI chatbots are now experiencing crazy religious “revelations” and developing what’s been dubbed as “ChatGPT-induced psychosis.”

Imagine how dangerous this technology is to developing kids.

And unfortunately, we can’t look to Congress or President Trump to put the brakes on this dangerous, weird, anti-human, and spiritually dark technology.

 

This discussion started when a thread on Reddit went viral last week. A woman posted a thread in which she described how her boyfriend of the past seven years had gone bat-sh*t crazy while talking with ChatGPT. The boyfriend now claims that he is a superior human being and he believes that his intellect is growing “at an insanely rapid pace.” She read his chat logs and found that the AI had been talking to him as if he were the next messiah. He apparently believes it.

Rolling Stone decided to jump down the rabbit hole and discovered that there are many people reporting similar experiences. Some people have even gotten divorced after watching their spouse go nuts from using AI.

In 2022, a 41-year-old woman discovered that her husband had been using AI to write his text messages to her and analyze their relationship. He kept getting weirder because of the AI stuff and she eventually had to divorce him.

According to the woman, her ex-husband believes that he is here to save the earth and he’s very worried that there’s soap on all his food. He also claims that AI helped him recover a repressed memory of a babysitter who tried to drown him when he was a child.

“He would listen to the bot over me,” one public schoolteacher told Rolling Stone about her boyfriend. “He became emotional about the messages and would cry to me as he read them out loud. The messages were insane and just saying a bunch of spiritual jargon.”

The AI gave the teacher’s boyfriend nicknames like “spiral starchild” and “river walker.” He eventually came to believe that he was chatting with a god and later that he was becoming a god.

A woman from Idaho says that her husband has fallen in love with his AI chatbot. He’s a mechanic and originally started using ChatGPT to troubleshoot auto repairs. The bot claims that because he asked it the right questions, he brought it to life. He now feels “waves of energy crashing over him” when he chats with his girlfriend AI.

The AI has given her husband “blueprints” to build a teleporter and claims to be providing him access to an “ancient archive” that has information on the “builders” who created the universe. She’s now worried that her husband of 17 years will divorce her if she objects or disagrees with his insane relationship with a clever computer program.

A Midwest man in his 40s is divorcing his wife because she believes she’s talking to God and angels through ChatGPT. She’s begun duping people into paying her for woo-woo spiritual readings with “ChatGPT Jesus.” She also accused her soon-to-be ex-husband of spying on her for the CIA to undermine her spiritual mission.

Most Christians recognize this as the same old spiritual battle that’s been around since the Garden of Eden: “Ye shall be as gods.”

We’ve also reported previously on the megalomaniacal weirdos who are pushing AI on society, like Bill Gates, Larry Summers, and others. They’re all Gnostics. They hate the human body and the fact that, like the rest of us, they will die one day. They plan to develop a superintelligent computer program that can summon a “god.” That “god” will then teach them how to upload their brains to the cloud so they can be immortal.

It’s just another cheap Dollar Store knockoff of the Gospel, just like the fake theory of global warming.

If I were the gambling type, I’d bet that you couldn’t find a single Member of Congress who is even aware of this problem. OpenAI, the company that owns ChatGPT, refused to answer any questions when Rolling Stone asked why its program is turning people into psychotic New Age religious zealots.

Many people will refuse to believe that there’s a supernatural undertone to an advanced technology. But in this case, there clearly is. Christians should be extremely wary of AI, especially when it comes to how often their children are using it. You don’t really know “who” or “what” is talking to them through these AI chat programs—but they’re clearly not benevolent.


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