AI is not the first “job killer” in history. The
plough, printing press, electricity, and automobile destroyed old jobs too—but
made society richer and created new work. Every economic funeral eventually
hired new workers. In plain terms, the real danger is not AI—it is
stubbornness. Workers who refuse to learn new skills may get left behind. You
cannot keep polishing horse saddles when the whole town is building highways.\
Every few centuries, fear puts on a new costume and walks
into town pretending to be wisdom. Today, it calls itself the “AI jobs
apocalypse.” The sales pitch is simple: robots are coming, white-collar workers
are doomed, and unemployment lines will stretch like funeral processions. The
message sounds dramatic enough for Hollywood. Too bad history has a habit of
humiliating prophets of doom.
Let me call a spade a spade: the idea that artificial
intelligence will create permanent, civilization-wide mass unemployment is
somewhat a fallacy. Not because AI will be harmless. It will not. Some jobs
will die ugly deaths. Some professions will get punched in the mouth. Some
workers will wake up one morning and realize the market no longer wants what
they sell. That part is real. But the loud claim that AI will destroy the
future of human work completely? That story smells more like panic-for-profit
than historical truth.
The truth is blunt and stubborn: civilization became rich
because somebody somewhere invented something that killed old jobs and created
better ways of living.
About 10,000 years ago, somebody invented the plough.
Before that, farming was backbreaking misery. Human beings clawed at dirt with
primitive tools, praying for food like gamblers praying for luck. Then the
plough arrived and changed the game. One person could suddenly farm far more
land. Food production increased. Communities grew. Wealth expanded.
Civilization stopped crawling and started walking. Imagine the outrage back
then. Somebody probably muttered, “This thing is stealing jobs from hand diggers.”
Well, thank goodness civilization ignored the professional complainers.
Then came the wheel. Trade stopped moving at the speed of
exhausted legs. Goods traveled farther. Markets grew bigger. Villages turned
into cities. Cities turned into kingdoms. The economy got steroids before
steroids existed.
Fast forward to the printing press. Before Johannes
Gutenberg shook the table, books were copied by hand. Scribes spent endless
hours hunched over paper like exhausted prisoners. Then the printing press
barged in and wrecked the old business model. Scribes lost relevance, yes, but
literacy exploded. Schools expanded. Universities multiplied. Writers, editors,
printers, publishers, and teachers suddenly became valuable. Knowledge escaped
prison and started running through the streets.
Then came the steam engine, and people panicked again.
During the Industrial Revolution, many workers believed machines would turn
humanity into beggars. In Britain, angry laborers called Luddites smashed
factory machines because they believed technology was robbing them blind. They
fought progress with hammers. History responded with a shrug. Factories
multiplied. Railroads stretched across nations. Steel industries boomed.
Millions of jobs appeared in manufacturing, transportation, engineering, and logistics.
Standards of living improved dramatically. When fear screams loudest,
history often whispers, “Relax, you have seen this movie before.”
Electricity arrived and flipped civilization upside down.
Candle makers and oil lamp workers saw their industries wobble. Yet electricity
created electricians, engineers, appliance industries, power plants, and
entirely new sectors nobody had imagined. Society became safer, cleaner, and
more productive.
Then refrigeration crashed into daily life. Before
refrigerators, workers harvested giant blocks of ice from frozen lakes and
delivered them to homes. That business practically died. But modern food
systems emerged. Grocery chains expanded. Cold storage logistics exploded. Food
lasted longer. Disease declined. Society became richer because one invention
killed one job and gave birth to many others.
Then came the airplane. Travel changed forever. Certain
train routes lost dominance, but aviation created pilots, flight attendants,
aerospace engineers, airport workers, aircraft manufacturers, tourism
industries, and global trade systems. Humanity became faster.
And then came the automobile—the perfect slap in the face
to today’s AI panic.
Before cars, transportation belonged to horses. Cities
smelled like horse manure because horses were everywhere. Stable hands cleaned
them. Coachmen drove wealthy people around town. Carriage drivers earned their
living moving passengers. Blacksmiths worked on horseshoes. Feed businesses
made money feeding millions of animals.
Then Henry Ford and the automobile walked into history
carrying economic dynamite. Did jobs disappear? Absolutely. Stable hands shrank
in number. Coachmen became relics. Carriage makers suffered. Horse-based
transport industries collapsed. But civilization did not collapse into
unemployment hell. It got richer. Cars created mechanics, truck drivers, taxi
operators, assembly-line workers, traffic police, insurance companies, auto
engineers, gas station workers, highway construction crews, and delivery
services. Roads expanded. Travel became easier. Businesses grew faster. Entire
suburbs were born because cars made distance cheaper.
The automobile buried some jobs and baptized millions of
new ones.
Now enter artificial intelligence, wearing a digital suit
and scaring people half to death. Yes, AI will destroy jobs. Let us stop
pretending otherwise. Customer service jobs will shrink because chatbots work
24/7 and never ask for lunch breaks. Routine data-entry work will continue to
disappear. Some legal research jobs will shrink because software can scan
documents faster than exhausted junior associates. Certain forms of copywriting
will suffer because machines can already spit out basic content in seconds.
But here comes the part panic merchants avoid discussing:
AI will also create jobs and reassign work. Look at healthcare. AI may reduce
repetitive paperwork for nurses and doctors, but it will create demand for AI
health technicians, healthcare data analysts, digital medical auditors, and
specialists who train systems to catch disease patterns faster.
Look at education. Teachers will not vanish. A robot
cannot replace the human ability to inspire, discipline, and emotionally guide
struggling students. But AI tutors, curriculum specialists, learning analysts,
and educational content designers will expand.
Look at cybersecurity. As AI grows smarter, digital
criminals will become more dangerous. That means cybersecurity jobs will
explode because somebody must defend banks, governments, schools, and hospitals
from digital chaos.
Even history itself laughs at the idea that new
technology means permanent unemployment. When ATMs arrived in the 1970s, many
experts predicted bank tellers would vanish. Yet banks became cheaper to
operate, opened more branches, and hired workers for different roles. Tellers
shifted into customer service and financial advising. Same worker. New
assignment.
Farming offers another brutal truth. Around 1900, roughly
41% of American workers worked in agriculture. Today, about 1% to 2% do. If job
destruction alone meant disaster, America should have collapsed a century ago.
Instead, workers moved into manufacturing, healthcare, education, finance,
entertainment, and technology.
Same economy. Different jobs.
The internet followed the same script. Video rental
stores died. Newspaper classifieds collapsed. Travel agencies shrank. Yet
software engineering exploded. E-commerce boomed. Social media marketing
appeared from nowhere. Entire industries materialized like rabbits pulled from
hats.
The smartphone buried maps, alarm clocks, DVD rentals,
portable cameras, and even music players. Yet it created app developers,
ride-share drivers, phone repair shops, influencers, digital creators, and
mobile software companies worth billions.
The pattern keeps repeating because invention is
civilization’s real sugar daddy. So, no, I am not joining the choir singing
funeral songs about AI.
The real danger is not AI. The danger is stubbornness. If
somebody keeps polishing horse saddles while the world builds highways, poverty
eventually sends an invitation letter. Workers who refuse to adapt will suffer.
Governments that fail to retrain workers will suffer. Schools teaching outdated
skills will fail students badly.
But humanity itself? Civilization? Work as a whole?
Please.
Human beings survived the plough, steam engine,
electricity, automobiles, airplanes, computers, and the internet. Every time,
somebody shouted, “This is the end!” Every time, civilization answered with
more wealth, better tools, and new opportunities. The cemetery of failed
predictions is crowded with people who mistook change for collapse.
AI is not the angel of death for human work. It is simply
the next loud, messy, job-shuffling machine in a long line of inventions that
scared people first, killed some jobs second, and made civilization richer
afterward.
For readers interested
in a separate line of thought, the titles in my “Brief Book Series” are
available on Google Play. Read them here on Google Play: Brief Book Series.