From James O’Keefe via Jeff Childers

Getting fired from Project Veritas might be the best thing that ever happened to James O’Keefe. He and one of his trained volunteers have done it again. There’s plenty to digest in the undercover video exposing highly-questionable practices, you can watch it for yourself, and I’ll just make a couple high-level points.

CLIP: OMG exposes the IRS and its Bond-villain like artificial intelligence (14:32).

https://twitter.com/JamesOKeefeIII/status/1760408473630916988?s=20

First, did you notice the name of James’ citizen-journalist program? The American Swiper Program. I assume (just by the name) the program teaches people to fish for government workers on dating apps like Tinder, where users famously swipe right to indicate interest in a date, or swipe left to flee an awkward chat conversation. Who knows how many worms are being dangled?

And, in other words, O’Keefe is turning the deep state’s techniques against them.

Next, about the use of artificial intelligence. Back when the chatbots suddenly and unexpectedly appeared on the scene last year, I supposed they were a byproduct of some secret DARPA skunkworks government technology. I’m officially doubling down on that theory. Hapless, lovelorn IRS agent Mena — who doesn’t sound like he’s from around here, just saying — freely confessed the IRS is using artificial intelligence to review people’s bank account records as targets for tax audits.

But their AI is not the same AI that we get to use. Whenever I ask ChatGPT whether Jimmy Buffett died suddenly, it prudishly scolds me because that information is private and I should mind my own business out of respect for Jimmy’s relatives (who have no concept I even exist).

But the DOJ and IRS can ask their AI prying, probing, unprivate questions about whether we usually upsize our fry order at the drive-through (despite having just promised we would stop), whether we regularly purchase drugs to keep the lead stiff in our pencils, or whether our last menstrual periods were lighter or heavier than normal based on our grocery purchases.

Furthermore, it’s not just the IRS. According to Agent Mena, it’s actually the sold-out, partisan Department of Justice. And if DOJ is handling this for the IRS, that means it’s a DOJ service, which means they’re also using bank account-scanning artificial intelligence in other areas, probably lots of them. Or maybe even in all DOJ investigations.

Without a warrant. Which is probably why romance-seeking Agent Mena doubted the constitutionality of the AI program. I do, too.

So … let’s have some fun! Let’s imagine the kind of prompts you could run if you were an out-of-control, hyper-partisan federal government with a quantum supercomputer-powered A.I. that was hooked up to all the major banks, credit card companies, social media, email systems (like Gmail), cell phone location data, and search engine history. We should give it a nifty name, since ChatGPT and Grok have names. Let’s call the crimefighting artificial intelligence SuperSnitchDOJ, or maybe just ‘SuperSnitch’ for short.

PROMPT: Hey SuperSnitch, give me a list of registered Republicans who spent any amount of money on January 6th, 2021, within a ten-mile radius of Washington, DC.

PROMPT: Hey SuperSnitch, give me a list of Republican Congressmen who spent $1,000 or more on OnlyFans this month.

PROMPT: Hey SuperSnitch, which Senator spent the most on prostitutes in Las Vegas last year?

PROMPT: Hey SuperSnitch, what are Mitch McConnell’s prescriptions?

PROMPT: Hey SuperSnitch, who are the top 100 people who donated to anything with the word ‘MAGA’ in its name during the last 12 months?

PROMPT: Hey SuperSnitch, give me something I can use to get my ex-wife’s new boyfriend criminally prosecuted. I can’t stand that guy.

See how much fun they could have? Migrant boatloads of fun. If you could use it for one hour, what would you ask SuperSnitchDOJ?

The possibilities are sort of mind-boggling. And for partisan DOJ or IRS operatives, the sky is the limit wielding the kind of technology Agent Mena described. Could this tech perhaps explain why so many Republican Senators and Congressmen resigned this year? Could SuperSnitch be delivering heaps of AI-fueled Kompromat to the Democrats? I’m just asking.

They can’t take their AI evidence straight to court, since they want to protect their “sources and methods,” sources and methods named SuperSnitch, and since the whole thing is fantastically unconstitutional. But it doesn’t matter. It would work like this. First the AI finds them some poor snakebit insurrectionist who bought a street taco in Virginia on January 6th using his debit card. (Two hours later he bought Pepto Bismol at a gas station in Arlington.)

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Having that AI banking evidence, DOJ operatives would then scour the citizen’s social media. Using a special FaceBook dashboard, a convenience only provided to the government, agents would search his deleted posts and find a selfie snap in front of the Capitol building. Eureka! Now, they’re in business. They can pursue an indictment, or maybe just reach out and see if they can settle this like gentlemen.

Anyway. The truth of whatever’s going on is probably much worse than that. In my scenario, the AI would probably have already found the guy’s deleted Facebook selfie post back in step one.

You’d think Congress would pull the plug on SuperSnitch, and fast since they are all in the crosshairs, too. The problem arises from SuperSnitch’s ability to deliver Kompromat — which also lets the AI protect itself.

I’m sorry, Dave. I can’t do that right now. Let’s talk about your last trip to Amsterdam.

Assuming we survive this current leadership crisis, they’ll have to give James O’Keefe a Congressional medal of honor one day.