AI - The Most Human Jobs May Be the First to Go
Everyone assumes AI will replace repetitive mechanical work first, while creative and “human” jobs stay safe. But the opposite may happen. Physical work in the real world — plumbing, construction, repairs, healthcare — is incredibly difficult to automate because reality is messy and unpredictable. Meanwhile, AI has become surprisingly good at language, persuasion, empathy simulation, and creativity. A robot still struggles to fix a leaking pipe, but AI can already produce marketing campaigns, therapy-style conversations, legal drafts, lessons, and business strategy at near-zero cost.
The uncomfortable implication is that many white-collar industries don’t actually reward deep expertise or authenticity — they reward outputs that sound competent, reassuring, and professional. AI doesn’t need to be better than the best designer, lawyer, or consultant; it only needs to outperform the average. That could massively devalue large parts of knowledge work while increasing the value of people who can direct AI effectively. Ironically, the future may look less like “robots doing manual labour while humans create art,” and more like “humans fixing roofs while machines write poetry.”
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