The_Italian_Uncut

joined 1 month ago
[–] The_Italian_Uncut@beehaw.org -3 points 4 weeks ago (2 children)

You say the economy will always need people because they are the demand. But who buys AI systems? Other companies. Who buys weapons? Governments. Who buys logistics automation? Corporations.

The demand isn’t from people. It’s from systems that want to eliminate people.

This isn’t hyperbole. It’s the trend.

We published an episode on this — not to claim we have all the answers, but to show it’s more complex than ‘people will always be needed’.

If you’ve listened and still disagree, I’d love to hear your counterpoints. Maybe the real oversimplification is believing we already know how this story ends — before the data is even in.

[–] The_Italian_Uncut@beehaw.org 6 points 1 month ago

You're right: critical roles in healthcare, emergency services, hospital IT — they’re not being filled.

Not because they aren’t needed. Because the system doesn’t reward filling them. It rewards cost-cutting, higher margins, shareholder returns.

So we automate hiring with AI… …to justify not hiring humans.

The machine isn’t the problem. It’s the excuse.

We’re moving from a system that grew rich by exploiting people — with CEOs earning hundreds of times more than their workers — to one that thinks it can grow rich by eliminating workers altogether.

But if everyone cuts staff… who will buy the goods?

And when no one has money, who will buy what AI produces?

[–] The_Italian_Uncut@beehaw.org 4 points 1 month ago (2 children)

Exactly. Since the end of the gold standard, the economy hasn’t been about production — it’s been about valuation.

70 years ago, companies were built to make things: cars, fridges, tools. Today, they’re built to inflate stock prices.

The real product isn’t goods. It’s debt, speculation, planned obsolescence.

And now, AI isn’t replacing workers to make things better. It’s replacing them to cut costs — while real needs go unmet.

This isn’t progress. It’s the slow collapse of a system that forgot its purpose.

[–] The_Italian_Uncut@beehaw.org -1 points 1 month ago (12 children)

This isn't just ChatGPT vs. HR. It's a system where automation replaces human labor at every level — from hiring to production.

I’ve just published an episode on how AI, robotics, and exponential change aren’t just transforming jobs — but possibly the entire future of the economy.

We’re in a transitional phase. The next few years are crucial.

So if you’re asking ‘Will AI take your job?’, the deeper question is: What happens when the economy no longer needs people?

[–] The_Italian_Uncut@beehaw.org 14 points 1 month ago

When a documentary about GPU scarcity is taken down by a financial news giant, it’s not about copyright. It’s about who controls the narrative on scarcity, speculation, and power. The black market isn’t the problem. The system that created it is. And the real story is always the one they don’t want you to see.

[–] The_Italian_Uncut@beehaw.org 3 points 1 month ago

Powerful testimony. The fact that someone who worked inside Palantir is now speaking out about the real-world impact of its tools — from ICE raids in New York to bombing campaigns in Gaza — is a crucial wake-up call.

What’s most disturbing is how these "AI kill chains" blur the line between domestic policing and warfare. They’re not just used in conflict zones. They’re being normalized in our cities, schools, and neighborhoods.

We’ve covered how war is changing — from the rearmament of Europe to the erosion of international law in Gaza. But this piece shows something deeper: the privatization of violence through algorithmic systems.

Companies like Palantir aren’t just selling software. They’re selling decision-making power — and doing it without democratic oversight.

The question isn’t just "how do we stop this?" but "how did we let it start?"

👉 theitalianuncut.ch