
Hello, readers. Today’s post is mainly for writers, but really, like all my posts, it’s for all of you, dear subscribers to my blog. It won’t be long until this blog evaporates into the ether, or wherever websites and blogs go after their server contracts are not renewed. In case you missed it, for my website and blog, that’ll be this September. However, I’ll still be writing about The Way and about the writing life over at Blogger.com.
What about writers and self-respect?
Self-respect is connected to today’s topic: writers and AI. Remember, AI stands for Artificial Intelligence. I know, I know. This issue of AI is all over the map. Some believe it’s helpful in certain fields, like those pertaining to science and math. But if you ask some of us who care about literature, you might get a different response. We say something like this: If you want artificial novels, plays, poems, memoirs and articles spit out by a machine (in part or in whole), fine. But some of us don’t.
We don’t want literature like that, and we sure won’t write it like that. We refuse to use AI to create any literary works, i.e. poems, novels, plays, essays or ANYTHING else, including book reviews. We don’t consider a book, for instance, as a product, although of course it goes into the marketplace to be sold like one. But some of us believe it shouldn’t be MADE like one. Writing is mysterious. It comes from our hearts, our minds, our emotions, our imaginations, our intuition, our subconscious that wakes us in the night serving up the perfect adjective for a character in a story. Of course, our own life experiences inform our work no matter what we write. Writing done by a living, breathing human contributes to understanding the human condition, shared by a human with other humans.
In case you haven’t guessed, I do not believe AI is a good or appropriate tool for writers. Frankly, I think consigning our work to AI shows a disregard for the creative process that only humans can experience. There’s more on my mind about this, but I’ll stop now.
A kindred spirit’s view of AI
A kindred spirit turned up recently: Cal Revely-Calder, Literary Editor, The Telegraph, who wrote an article titled, In an AI age, writers should have some self-respect.
I read it and said YAY over and over again. Revely-Calder points out that writers using AI to do their work are actually lacking in self-respect. He writes, “Writing is thinking. They are inseparable processes. Circumvent them and you may as well not have bothered.” He argues that if your confidence in your ability to be a writer is so low that you resort to using a machine to do it, then stop and do something else. I think that’s sound advice. And on a side note (maybe more of a main note) I’ll tell you, this topic sets off a volcanic eruption in me. Here’s why…
What AI did
In case you don’t know, AI swept up a whole lot of content from dedicated writers whose work takes time, reflection, human intelligence, experience, emotional expression, careful planning, and more. AI has none of those qualities. It is ARTIFICIAL. It’s like a stainless-steel holding tank with a nozzle that spews out data and information. Where did it get all that? It stole it from HUMANS. Unlike humans, AI has no ethical or moral aspects to it.
As far as literature goes, AI has stolen and continues to steal content from people who worked hard to bring their writing into the world. In my experience with the field of words, that’s called plagiarism. People who plagiarize (that means steal) lose their jobs, friends, reputations, when they’re caught doing it. In my dreams, they pay fines and go to jail.
Why the AI issue is extra personal to me
This issue is deeply personal, not only because of the obvious—I am a writer and a writer who wrote a guidebook for the writing life—but also because the cult leader I followed/adored/obeyed for 17 years, Victor Paul Wierwille, turned out to be a certain kind of thief: a plagiarist. He stole content from other people’s theological books and Bible classes and passed it off as his own (see note 1). He did not cite others; he did not include footnotes acknowledging where he got his information, he certainly never confessed he’d been a thief. He lamely said he “learned from others,” or that God told him what to write and teach. That’s it. Back in 1984-1986 when I discovered what Wierwille had done, I quit making excuses for him and resigned from The Way’s biblical research department as fast as I could. That story is in my memoir, Undertow.
Shamefully, leaders of The Way International™, which is still in business, have not, and most likely will never, admit Wierwille plagiarized anything (see note 2), despite evidence given by me and a few others. To admit he did, might put The Way out of business.
The Authors Guild educates and advocates
I’m a member of The Authors Guild, which offers many articles about AI and writers. Here’s a quote from one, Artificial Intelligence – The Authors Guild. “Artificial intelligence machines capable of generating text-based works pose a serious threat to the writing profession and to our literary culture. Generative technologies built illegally on vast amounts of copyrighted works without licenses—that is, without giving authors any compensation or control over the use of their works—are used to cheaply and easily produce works that compete with and displace human-authored books, journalism, and other works.”
I’ll close by again giving you the link to Cal Revely-Calder’s wonderful, articulate, and concise article about AI and writers. Published on April 7, 2026:
In an AI age, writers should have some self-respect
Notes:
- Wierwille stole content from E. W. Bullinger‘s books, such as How to Enjoy the Bible; stole material for a Bible class he named, Power for Abundant Living, taken from a class about gifts of the Holy Spirit by B. J. Leonard; copied a huge amount from a Holy Spirit book by Jack E. Stiles (I have a copy of Wierwille’s book and Stiles’s book, and there’s no doubt about Wierwille’s theft), and there were more he stole from.
- The Way’s website gives this whitewashed bio of Wierwille: About the Founder – Dr. Victor Paul Wierwille
Thanks for reading!
Your writer on the wing,
Charlene
CHARLENE L. EDGE is the author of the award-winning memoir, Undertow: My Escape from the Fundamentalism and Cult Control of The Way International. She spent 17 years (1970-1987) in The Way as a leader and Biblical researcher.
After escaping the cult, she earned a B.A. in English from Rollins College in 1994, graduating summa cum laude, and worked for more than a decade as a writer in the software industry.
A member of the Florida Writers Association, the Authors Guild, and the International Cultic Studies Association, Edge is also a prize-winning poet. She lives in Florida with her husband, Hoyt L. Edge, Professor Emeritus of Philosophy.
Her latest book is From the Porch to the Page: A Guidebook for the Writing Life (New Wings Press, LLC. 2022). Both books are sold online in paperback and eBook at Amazon, Barnes & Noble, and other booksellers.
Read about Charlene and her work: Profile – Charlene L. Edge – The Authors Guild

Roz Ray
Thanks! So agree with you and think that authors should be compensated for their work. I am no writer but appreciate so many authors for giving me information in a wonderful informative way and other authors providing me great pleasure with their stories. Why should the AI builders be allowed to steal all this work with no permission or compensation?
Kathleen Brandt
Couldn’t agree more!