10 pointsby speckx3 hours ago3 comments
  • hodder2 hours ago
    This is a "wishful thinking" take that ignores a brutal reality: AI isn’t just a tool; it’s raising the cognitive floor for employment. We are rapidly approaching a point where the baseline IQ required to contribute at all will surpass the capabilities of a huge segment of the population. And that floor is rising.

    You can already see the decoupling: Mag7 hiring has flatlined while their AI capex hits the moon. Even the "brightest minds" are being replaced by the hardware they built. No amount of policy or interest rate maneuvering can stop this shift because you can't legislate away the fact that human labor is becoming an inferior good.

    The assumption that this shift can be evenly distributed and broadly wiped away via policy tools is asinine.

    This time IS different.

    Sidenote: This is exactly why I’m so bullish on risk assets—we are transitioning into an economy where capital no longer needs to drag the weight of a massive, increasingly "useless" workforce, and the policy responses will actually exacerbate the shift (ie. rates down on unemployment = assets up)

    • rogerrogerran hour ago
      I think you're right. I think that a majority of people, including myself, will be generally unemployable soon.

      I'm early career and have a few hundred thousand dollars I can deploy. What's the best way to invest?

    • cal_dent41 minutes ago
      Sort of agree with this but I do find it amusing that this sort of take on it implicitly discounts that the capital still has to live with all these “useless” people on the same rock, whose numbers will grow to an unignorable amount...The idea that anything will be insulated is for the fairies and seems just as asinine to me
  • wkrkr3 hours ago
    I’m getting sick of these broad sweeping statements about where things are heading.

    Ive never seen someone put together a well formed argument that is rich in depth and play it through - I get that this requires vision and most don’t have it - but at the same time I’d wish people would shut up if they have nothing new to contribute.

    Not to mention the bizarro economists were completely wrong about prediction re. The impact of the web.

    • gdulli2 hours ago
      We should absolutely use the lessons we learned about how the web unfolded to inform our predictions about AI.

      Our naivete back in 1996 could be forgiven. Not applying the lessons since then and anticipating how subsequent technologies will be captured and used against us is irresponsible.

      • MattDamonSpace43 minutes ago
        Okay so give me an application of a web lesson
        • cal_dent40 minutes ago
          The only relevant lesson is that predictions are likely to be more wrong than right tbh
    • 2 hours ago
      undefined
    • black_133 hours ago
      [dead]
  • canary_bird_001an hour ago
    [flagged]