While AI automates many tasks, it also makes software development cheaper and faster. This lowers the barrier to entry for new projects, increasing the overall demand for programmers to build and manage these newly feasible applications, especially for smaller companies.
Viewing AI as a simple disruption is insufficient. The better metaphor is "terraforming"—a fundamental, irreversible reshaping of the entire economic landscape. This framing emphasizes the scale and permanence of the change, forcing businesses to adapt radically or face extinction.
We are in a temporary phase where a human using AI is superior to AI alone. This creates a fleeting opportunity for individuals and startups to innovate rapidly. However, this advantage is short-lived, likely leading to a cycle of companies that "pop and disappear" as AI capabilities advance.
Joe Lonsdale's willingness to pay a 90% tax is not an endorsement of high taxes but a recognition that a functioning, stable society is essential for wealth creation and preservation. The core frustration for the wealthy is not the tax rate itself, but paying for an incompetent government.
The most effective way to use AI in creative fields is not as an automaton to generate final products, but as a tireless, hyper-knowledgeable writing partner. The human provides taste and direction, guiding the AI through back-and-forth exchanges to refine ideas and overcome creative blocks.
The impact of AI-driven job displacement is magnified by the current economic downturn. In a boom, laid-off workers might start successful companies. In a recession, these new ventures are more likely to fail, eliminating the typical entrepreneurial safety net and accelerating economic strain.
History's major technological shifts—industrialization, electrification, the internet—each wiped out the careers of one to two generations. Those workers suffered while their grandchildren benefited. AI is likely to repeat this pattern, creating a generational chasm between those who lose and those who gain.
A progressive candidate's campaign ad preemptively addresses all potential attacks against her, from being a "radical Democrat" to not taking PAC money. This mirrors the "8 Mile" rap battle tactic of owning your weaknesses to neutralize them as weapons for your opposition.
To secure commitments from Donald Trump, diplomat Momdani employed a highly personalized strategy. Instead of policy debate, he presented old newspaper clippings celebrating Trump's past achievements, directly appealing to his ego and desire for a positive legacy, proving to be a "Trump whisperer."
Jack Dorsey is one of the first major tech leaders to explicitly state that layoffs are due to AI's increased efficiency, not post-COVID right-sizing or economic pressure. This sets a new public precedent for how companies will justify workforce reductions in the AI era.
