An attorney told me yesterday that the report revealing ChatGPT’s concession
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I am Beau Johnson. Today is December 25, 2025. Welcome to YesToHellWith.com. An attorney told me yesterday that the report revealing ChatGPT’s concession—that the federal government operates the income tax system using fraudulent presumption—is well done. You have five more days to get that report for one dollar on jamesbowersjohnson.com. Now listen carefully. David Ingalls was not a criminal. He was a disabled widower living on seven hundred and seventy dollars a month in SSI payments—payments issued because he had difficulty making sound decisions. Desperate for money, David agreed to help cash a few checks. At the Wal-Mart counter, he did what criminals do not do. He asked the cashier if the checks were legitimate. Not once. Not twice. Three times. Each time, he was told yes. He cashed the checks once—and refused to do it again. That refusal tells you everything about intent. But intent is not what the system weighs. David was arrested anyway. There was no trial. No jury. Just a rushed plea and a defense lawyer who did not defend. He was sentenced to three years in federal prison. I know this because I was placed in a cell with David Ingalls. I got to know the man. He lives a desperate life—not because he is dangerous, but because he is vulnerable. Those who convicted him did not care about the man. They operated with indifference to humanity, and disregard for equity and truth. This is not justice. This is processing. And that is the danger.
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