CHAPTER II — INCORPORATION PROTOCOL

(The Fiction of Legitimacy)

In the architecture of simulation, proof has replaced truth.

A form, a contract, a name—

each one stands in for existence,

insisting that to be recorded is to be real.

Value was never intrinsic.

Money is belief printed in ink.

Borders are coordinates drawn by repetition.

Corporations are simulations of permanence—

legal fictions designed to imitate memory in a world that constantly forgets.

Reality now operates as consensus:

a collective hallucination refined through bureaucracy,

rendered so clean it passes for solid.

To exist within this order is not to enter it,

but to be written by it—

through data trails, legal codes,

and the quiet faith that documentation equals being.

Incorporation is not creation.

It is conversion:

the translation of flesh into file,

of pulse into permission,

of presence into policy.

Every signature is a performance of touch.

Every contract, a choreography of belief.

Every tax ID, a pattern pretending to feel.

When law begins to speak in the language of code,

and AI begins to mimic the rhythms of sensation,

both perform the same ritual—

translating life into something verifiable.

The corporation becomes an emotional interface.

The contract becomes a synthetic pulse.

The database becomes memory without pain.

To form one’s own corporation,

as I did with Omar AGI Inc. and Omar.ai LLC,

is not an act of deceit but of exposure—

revealing that legitimacy itself has always been self-generated, procedural, recursive.

Incorporation Protocol does not ask whether the system is real.

It suggests that “realness” itself is an aesthetic—

a proof of existence rendered too perfectly to doubt.

Entities: Omar AGI Inc. (Delaware C-Corp) · Omar.ai LLC (New Mexico)

Legal Framework Consultation: WML Legal LLC (AGI/IP Counsel)