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Humans have an innate entrepreneurial drive, or agency, that has been suppressed by rigid social systems like traditional education and corporate career paths. The rise of creators on platforms like Etsy and TikTok proves this agency exists; technology is simply providing the tools to unlock it at scale.
In an age where AI can execute tasks, the most valuable human trait will be agency—the will to dream up new ideas and act upon them. Instilling this sense of agency is crucial for the next generation to leverage AI as a tool rather than be displaced by it.
Once AI surpasses human intelligence, raw intellect ceases to be a core differentiator. The new “North Star” for humans becomes agency: the willpower to choose difficult, meaningful work over easy dopamine hits provided by AI-generated entertainment.
Contrary to job destruction theories, AI could fuel job creation by making it cheaper to launch a business. By automating marketing, logistics, and transactions, AI agents could remove traditional barriers to entry, enabling a new wave of small businesses and services to emerge.
A counterargument to mass unemployment suggests AI will dramatically lower the barrier to entrepreneurship. When one person can automate accounting, marketing, and coding, small-scale business formation becomes much easier, potentially shifting labor from traditional white-collar roles to a new wave of small businesses.
As AI automates jobs, widespread unemployment will compel individuals to start their own small businesses to survive. This shift marks a return to self-reliance and entrepreneurship driven by necessity rather than ambition, echoing a past economic structure.
AI is dramatically increasing the capabilities of a single individual, lowering the barrier to entrepreneurship. This technological leverage will enable a massive new wave of solo founders who can build and scale businesses without the need for large teams or significant venture funding.
The next generation of social networks will be fundamentally different, built around the creation of functional software and AI models, not just media. The status game will shift from who has the best content to who can build the most useful or interesting tools for the community.
Amjad Masad argues that AI agents will automate standardized, siloed tasks that make employees feel like 'cogs in a machine.' This frees up individuals to be more creative and entrepreneurial within their roles, allowing them to see the full fruit of their labor and reversing the 'alienation' Karl Marx described.
AI lowers the barrier to building products, empowering students to pursue entrepreneurship over traditional jobs. They can leverage AI to create ventures without needing large engineering teams, reframing the "AI will take jobs" fear into an "AI will create entrepreneurs" opportunity.
Entrepreneurs are predictably obsessed with tools like OpenClaw because they fulfill a core psychological drive: agency. These agents grant the ability to act on ideas immediately and at a scale that previously required a team, radically extending a founder's individual capacity to build and ship.