Shownotes
The Industrial Revolution comparison only holds if workers own a slice of what replaces them — and right now, most don't. Jerremy Alexander Newsome and Dave Conley press Ryan Kohler on whether AI is a net jobs creator, and his answer splits cleanly on ownership: the investor and tech class will deploy agents to cut headcount, but individuals who build first keep the value. Sarah Montana argues anyone can speak a business into existence by using AI to fill gaps nobody's serving yet. For a 58-year-old laid-off worker, the path is concrete — get near local problems, stack fractional work across small firms, and build micro-SaaS dashboards from QuickBooks or CRM data by finding a buyer before writing a single line of code. Cooperatives and guilds get named as the mechanism to share knowledge and reclaim spending power outside corporate systems.
Timestamps:
- (00:00) Industrial Revolution redux – who actually wins when AI scales
- (00:14) AI creates jobs, maybe – Ryan steelmans the optimistic case
- (05:58) Cooperatives and guilds – grassroots ownership as the counterweight
- (09:57) 58, laid off, now what – proximity, fractional work, and a real next step
- (18:20) Buyer before builder – find the market before you prototype anything
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