You might disagree with what Trumpโs saying heโs going to doโฆbut itโs also pretty sick to deliberately use women and children as human shields like this - thereโs even a baby there.
Jensen Huang just killed the AI jobs panic.
Not with a forecast. With a pattern.
Huang: โThe fact of the matter is PCs made us more busy. The internet made us more busy. Mobile devices made us super busy.โ
Every tool that promised to free us expanded what we could reach instead.
The PC did not give accountants their afternoons back. It gave them ten times the clients.
The internet did not slow anything down. It erased the geographic limit on what one person could build.
The smartphone did not hand you time. It handed work your coordinates and never let go.
None of them reduced what we did. All of them raised what we could.
AI will not be different.
It will not give you rest. It will give you a thousand things you couldnโt have built before.
The people waiting for relief are reading the wrong pattern.
This was never about less. It was always about expanding what one person can attempt.
The panic runs on one assumption.
That labor is surplus.
Huang: โWe are millions of truck drivers short. We are tens of millions of manufacturing workers short.โ
The economy is not drowning in surplus labor. It is bleeding from the absence of it.
Robots are not arriving as invaders. They are arriving as reinforcements to a system already failing without them.
The collapse was already underway. The machines just showed up to a building already on fire.
Huang: โTheyโll hire more people to manage more robots, hire more people, manage more agents.โ
The raw work is leaving human hands. The direction of it is not.
Every company deploying agents still needs someone deciding what theyโre pointed at.
The question is not whether AI replaces you.
The question is whether you learn to command it before someone who already has.
Every tool that promised less work delivered more world.
AI will be the largest expansion of that pattern in history.
You are not losing your job to a machine.
You are losing it to someone who learned to run one.
I've been adding basic boomer lifestyle choices like watch the sunrise, touch pages in a book, listen to music with real instruments, smell/taste the food while cooking and it's improved my mental health.
Esp the music part. I'm on some Fleetwood Mac, CCR, Hall & Oates rotation, and the raw simplicity of instruments and voices has been rewiring my brain.