Jensen Huang just described something that should keep every worker in America awake tonight.
Not because AI is coming for their job.
Because most of them never understood what their job actually was.
Huang: “The task of our job and the purpose of our job are related, not the same.”
Most people think their job is the thing they do with their hands for eight hours a day.
Write code. Fill spreadsheets. Draft emails. Push pixels.
That was never the job.
That was the task.
The job was always the thinking underneath it.
Huang: “If you apply that to me, you would come to the conclusion what Jensen does for a living is tap on phones and talk. And tapping on phones and talking, AI has done that just fine. And therefore my job should be gone. But I’m busier than ever.”
This is the part nobody wants to sit with.
The people panicking about AI aren’t afraid of losing their work.
They’re afraid of finding out they never had any.
They had a routine. A repetitive motion. A series of keystrokes that felt like purpose.
Now a machine does it in four seconds.
Huang: “AI has created more than half a million jobs in the last couple of years.”
The data says one thing.
The fear says another.
Because the fear was never about employment numbers.
It was about identity.
We spent fifty years hunched over keyboards, convinced the hunching was the work.
Huang: “The idea that being human means to hunch over on this little thing, typing all the time… 50 years before that, people didn’t do that.”
Fifty years.
That’s all it took to build an entire identity around a posture.
We don’t type for a living. We think for a living. We imagine for a living.
The keyboard was always just the delivery mechanism. Never the product.
Huang: “It is a fundamental flaw that we only need a billion lines of code written. We need a trillion lines of code written.”
The demand was always infinite.
The bottleneck was always our fingers.
AI doesn’t shrink the workforce. It removes the cap on what the workforce can actually build.
Huang: “Companies that use AI have demonstrated the ability to grow faster. When they grow faster, they hire more people.”
Growth doesn’t eliminate people. It pulls them in.
Every industrial revolution triggered the same panic. Same headlines. Same wrong conclusion.
And every single time, the economy didn’t contract.
It expanded into territory that didn’t exist before.
The real question was never whether AI takes your job.
It was whether you were ever anything more than the motions you repeated.
Because somewhere in the last fifty years, we stopped asking what the work was for.
We just kept typing.
And now the typing is done.
And millions of people are about to meet themselves for the first time.
With nothing to hide behind.
Some of them won’t survive what they find.
🚨 DOCTORS JUST “SWITCHED OFF” PARKINSON’S TREMORS IN REAL TIME — AND THE BEFORE/AFTER IS UNREAL
This video is going viral… because what happens doesn’t look possible.
One moment: uncontrollable shaking.
Moments later: complete stillness.
No open surgery. No implants.
Just MR-guided focused ultrasound targeting a tiny area deep in the brain.
• Hands that couldn’t hold still… suddenly steady
• Violent tremors… gone on the spot
• Patients testing movement immediately — and it actually works
• Doctors watching it happen LIVE inside the MRI
This isn’t gradual.
It’s instant.
And now people are asking the same question:
If this exists… why does it feel like no one’s talking about it?
📹: TikTok/tremor.care
Instead of watching an hour of Netflix, watch this 2 hour hour Stanford lecture will teach you more about how LLMs like ChatGPT and Claude are built than most people working at top AI companies learn in their entire careers.