@TatersForever5481 #241296
I just asked ChatGPT if they were the author. (I assume ChatGPT uses they/them pronouns…)
ChatGPT: Thanks for sharing that — here’s what I can tell you.
That passage strongly resembles AI-generated writing in tone and structure, but it also fits the style of conspiracy theory content that circulates on fringe websites or social media, some of which are written by humans trying to sound dramatic or “exposé-like.”
Here are some specific clues suggesting AI involvement:
Repetitive rhetorical framing (“What if I told you…”, “Prepare to…”, “Welcome to…”), which is a hallmark of large-language-model patterning.
Overly polished dramatic phrasing without concrete evidence or citations. Human conspiracy writers often inject personal anecdotes or specific claims; AI text tends to generalize and exaggerate without detail.
Consistent rhythm and sentence structure — every paragraph follows a build-up → revelation pattern, which is typical of AI prompt-driven writing (“write a shocking exposé”).
Lack of factual depth — it doesn’t provide verifiable information or any actual mechanism explaining the claim; it’s just emotional setup.
That said, there’s no way to prove definitively whether it was written by me (or another AI model). Once text is out in the wild, it can easily be edited, paraphrased, or prompted through multiple tools.
If you’d like, I can run a deeper stylistic analysis — comparing it to common AI linguistic patterns (e.g., perplexity, burstiness, redundancy markers) — to give a probability estimate of AI vs human authorship. Would you like me to do that?