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Public backlash against AI has deep psychological roots. It's not just about job loss, but a fundamental fear of power imbalances favoring a few. It also challenges humanity's central role, a disruption to the human ego similar to how the Copernican revolution challenged the church.

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Americans see AI not as a tool for progress, but as the ultimate weapon for a new corporate ethos where profits surge *because* of layoffs and offshoring. This breaks the historical assumption that company success benefits employees, making workers view AI as an existential threat.

Most public criticism of AI is not driven by high-minded philosophy but by a fundamental fear of personal financial loss. People worry AI will threaten their livelihood and then rationalize this fear by couching it in noble-sounding arguments about the dangers to society.

The public conversation about AI focuses on job loss, which generates immense fear. This unaddressed fear leads to political polarization and antisocial behavior, or "social ripples." These emotional reactions pose a greater societal threat than the technological disruption itself.

Many people's negative opinions on AI-generated content stem from a deep-seated fear of their jobs becoming obsolete. This emotional reaction will fade as AI content becomes indistinguishable from human-created content, making the current debate a temporary, fear-based phenomenon.

The rapid displacement of jobs by AI will cause suffering beyond finances. It will trigger a profound crisis of meaning and identity for millions whose sense of self is tied to their profession, creating emotional distress and potential societal unrest.

The dot-com era, despite bubble fears, was characterized by widespread public optimism. In stark contrast, the current AI boom is met with significant anxiety, with over 30% of Americans fearing AI could end humanity. This level of dread marks a fundamental shift in public sentiment toward new technology.

The most significant risk to AI development is not a technical challenge but a widespread public outcry from those whose jobs are displaced. This could lead to a "burn down OpenAI" mentality, resulting in crippling regulations that halt progress out of fear and sympathy for the displaced.

AI leaders often use dystopian language about job loss and world-ending scenarios (“summoning the demon”). While effective for fundraising from investors who are "long demon," this messaging is driving a public backlash by framing AI as an existential threat rather than an empowering tool for humanity.

The widespread fear of AI is not about the technology itself but is a symptom of extreme wealth inequality. With opportunity already hoarded by the wealthy, the median person feels vulnerable to any disruption. The AI panic is thus the latest expression of a society where economic dignity is already eroded.

The most dangerous long-term impact of AI is not economic unemployment, but the stripping away of human meaning and purpose. As AI masters every valuable skill, it will disrupt the core human algorithm of contributing to the group, leading to a collective psychological crisis and societal decay.

Anti-AI Sentiment Stems From Fears of Asymmetric Power and a 'Human Ego-Fuck' | RiffOn