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The Automation Ambition: Silicon Valley’s Vision for a Post-Work World

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Silicon Valley is no longer dreaming about replacing a few jobs with artificial intelligence — it’s planning to replace nearly all of them. Behind closed doors and increasingly in public, some of the most powerful figures in tech are advocating for the full automation of the global economy. The rationale? Where there’s labour, there’s money — and automating jobs means capturing the trillions paid in wages.

One startup, boldly declaring its goal to automate the entire economy, has drawn backing from major tech insiders. Their mission reflects a broader, unspoken movement: complete workforce replacement powered by AI and robotics. It’s not science fiction anymore. White-collar roles are already disappearing due to large language models and image generators. Blue-collar work is next, as advanced robots begin operating in factories and homes.

Recent breakthroughs have only accelerated this shift. AI is now passing elite professional exams and outperforming top engineers at coding tasks. Simultaneously, robotic systems are gaining dexterity, mastering dozens of store-floor tasks once thought too complex. The goal is simple: AI handles cognitive work, machines handle the physical. What remains for humans?

Tech leaders argue this will usher in unprecedented economic growth and prosperity. But history offers little confidence that such wealth will be shared fairly. More cynically, this is a land grab — a push to own not just the tools of production, but the entire process, cutting humans out of the equation.

This future may not be inevitable. AI may plateau, robots may falter, and investors may move on. But the intent is clear — and it demands public scrutiny. The question isn’t just can all jobs be automated. It’s why this is being pursued, and what kind of world it will leave behind.

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