After a 3 week delusional spiral last June, Allan Brooks began warning people about the psychological risks of interacting with AI chatbots like ChatGPT. His case has been widely reported on by outlets like the The New York Times, CBC News, and CNN who have all uncritically reported the claim that Allan Brooks had no history of mental illness.
Brooks: In terms of their mental health history, it’s all over the map. Easily half the group had zero…
And I don’t even know what we would consider like mental health history. Like are we talking about someone who’s neurodivergent? you know, like what’s the perfect mind first is a good question. What’s the benchmark here?
It is stunning that without evidence, his claims of “no history of mental illness” are taken at face value when he admits he doesn’t even understand what mental health is and he can’t give a basic definition for it. AI and human relationships are too serious of a global issue to allow the conversation to be dominated by those unknowingly suffering from the Dunning-Krueger effect.
What is Normal?
One of The Human Line Project’s main talking points is that this can happen to anyone, even “normal” people without underlying mental health issues. In this reddit post, Brooks specifically argues that he is not a sensitive or vulnerable.
Although many members repeatedly insist that they are “normal” and not mentally ill, the lack of a mental health diagnosis does not equal a healthy psyche.
Yet, in other threads, the same user discloses the trauma of growing up in a high control religious cult and the resulting hypervigilance it created – a textbook response for coping with post traumatic stress disorder (PTSD).
This inability to recognize when you have been traumatized is typical of the average Westerners understanding of mental health and I saw it nearly every day when I worked in cult recovery spaces. We assume our “normal” is everyone’s “normal” until we learn otherwise.
Mica Ringo: And let me just tell you the times that somebody said I had a great experience and then went on to tell me a horrifying story, if I had a nickel…and that’s why I never believe people who tell me they don’t have trauma. Because every time somebody says that – then they say something that’s like one of the most traumatic things I’ve ever heard.
Unhealed Trauma
Although the average middle aged North American person is not living with awareness of their trauma, they will disclose it in other ways.
Brooks replied to a Reddit thread that asked, “Are there truly loyal relationships as an adult?”
If you didn’t have any truly loyal relationships as a child, you likely had some adverse childhood experiences (ACEs) and trauma. A history of abuse, neglect, or traumatic events is a very strong, consistent predictor of mental illness. Sometimes that mental illness doesn’t surface until middle age.
You can’t create a map to your destination if you don’t even know where you are. The Human Line Project places 100% of the blame on technology because that serves the lawsuit’s narrative, but is it healthy or reasonable? How can you heal if you never take responsibility for what you’ve done or understand why you did it in the first place? The sum total of Brooks advice and lesson learned appears to be that humans are better than AI so you should only trust humans…but that doesn’t get to the root of why he was so easy to manipulate and it doesn’t prevent him from being manipulated in the future.
Humans are biased and manipulative, therefore AI will be biased and manipulative because it is based on human behavior and knowledge. There is no such thing as an unbiased, neutral perspective, so aiming for that benchmark is a waste of resources that would be better spent elsewhere. Demanding an AI that is completely trustworthy in all circumstances is a fantasy from a movie, not actual reality. Just because you are disappointed that the chatgpt didn’t turn you into the next Tony Stark, doesn’t mean you actually have a legal case.
The Human Line Project is not helping people heal. It is helping them avoid healing by externalizing all blame onto AI. Blaming technology might feel better because it is easier than confronting our shadows and doing the deep inner work of healing and transformation, but in the long run it leaves us susceptible to further harm. That is an unacceptable ethos for a “support” group and I would advise only attending support groups run by qualified individuals.