What’s really happening, in my view, is a forced economic shift. We’re heading into a kind of engineered recession—huge layoffs, lots of instability—where millions of service and admin-type jobs are going to disappear. Not because the tech is ready in a full AGI sense, but because those roles are the easiest to replace with automation and AI agents. They’re not core to the economy, and a lot of them are wrapped in red tape anyway.
So in the next couple years, I think we’ll see AI being used to clear out that mental bureaucracy—forms, paperwork, pointless approvals, inefficient systems. AI isn’t replacing deep creativity or physical labor yet, but it is filling in the cracks and acting like a smart band-aid. It’ll seem useful and “intelligent,” but it’s really just a transition tool.
And once that’s done, the next step is workforce reallocation—pushing people into real-world industries where hands-on labor still matters. Building, manufacturing, infrastructure, things that can’t be automated yet. It’s like the short-term goal is to use AI to wipe out all the mindless middle-layers of the system, and the longer-term vision is full automation—including robotics and real-world systems—maybe 10 or 20 years out.
But right now? This all looks like a top-down move to shift the population out of the “mind” industries and into something else. It’s not just AI progressing—it’s a strategic reset, wrapped in the language of innovation.