The Narrative About AI Triggered Job Loss is Speculative and Irresponsible

We are seeing an increased public narrative about the potential for job losses from AI deployment. These claims receive a great deal of media attention and are rewarded in the social media landscape for being as pessimistic as possible. Mass job loss remains highly speculative and many claims skew to the highly implausible. But this is causing mass harm.

The increasingly popular narrative of inevitable, catastrophic, long-term job loss due to artificial intelligence is not grounded in robust empirical evidence. It is overwhelmingly speculative, framed in worst-case abstractions, and presented to the public with a level of certainty that far exceeds what the data justifies. That alone would be intellectually questionable. But the deeper issue is ethical: the psychological and social harm caused by repeatedly presenting extreme scenarios as near-certainties.

There is a very real human cost to this discourse. People are not reading these forecasts as academic hypotheticals. They are internalizing them as personal futures. Students reconsider career paths. Mid-career professionals experience anxiety and loss of motivation. Workers in already uncertain labor markets feel prematurely obsolete. This is not a trivial side effect. It is a measurable psychological burden placed on millions of people based on projections that remain deeply uncertain and, in many cases, methodologically weak.

Serious economic forecasting requires discipline, historical grounding, and humility about technological diffusion. What we are instead seeing in many public conversations is a pattern of extrapolation from capability demos directly to labor market collapse, skipping entirely over the realities of workflow integration, governance constraints, liability frameworks, organizational inertia, and economic adaptation. That is not analysis. That is narrative acceleration.

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Just How Bad Are We Doing With Cyber Security? Lets look at the past week…

So just how bad is ransomware and cyber security in general? To get an impression, lets look at the past week. Just over the past 7 days, there have been over a dozen major ransomware attacks, though a few have not been well reported in the news media. The fact is, we have fallen for a kind of creeping normality. It’s not normal and it should not be considered a routine thing to see this happen.

Starbucks Impacted By Cyber Attack
Stop & Shop Hit By Cyber Incident – May Result In Bare Shelves
Supply Chain Management Vendor Blue Yonder Succumbs to Ransomware
The City of Odessa, TX Experiences a Cyber Incident
Weeks Later, Problems Persist At Hannaford Supermarkets
Wirral University Teaching Hospital Experiences Major Cyber Incident
Retailers Struggle After Attack on Supply Chain Provider Blue Yonder
RRCA Accounts Management Falls Victim to Play Ransomware Attack
Aspen Healthcare Services Announces Data Breach
Zyxel Firewalls Targeted in Recent Ransomware Attacks
Fintech Giant Finastra Investigates Data Breach

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How The Failure Of Cyber Security Cost Harris the Election

Many do not realize this, but Donald Trump largely won the election because of cyber security failings by the current administration. Don’t believe me? Cyber security losses are a huge factor in inflation and have caused a massive economic problem, which has decimated healthcare and cost billions to government agencies, all while financing Hamas and the war in Ukraine.

These macroscopic problems may not seem to be linked to cyber security losses, but they are. While politicians like to pretend it is a minor, specialized issue, the fact is that cyber losses are now decimating business and hurting the monetary supply. They are a huge factor in why American businesses are failing and why it is harder than ever to compete. The pain that Americans feel at the gas pump, when they get their pay check, pay for insurance and the problems in the world are not 100% caused by poor management of cyber risks, but that is part of it.

The biggest problem, as I have stated before, is that we simply cannot improve things until the insurance sector cleans up its act. The moral crisis we now are seeing is caused primarily by the insurance sector, which has made the decision that it is fine to lose money on cyber security and it’s fine to raise rates. They’ve created a monster, and that monster can’t be kept at bay until regulators wise up and recognize that insurance must be held accountable for the disgusting and despicable conduct of cyber security underwriters.

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