Let me tell you what I've been watching.
People are terrified right now. AI is taking jobs. A Berkeley grad with a 4.0 can't get hired. IT unemployment jumped from 3.9% to 5.7% in one month. Zuckerberg flat out said AI will replace mid-level engineers.
And everyone's asking: what's left for us?
I get it. I really do. But I think we're missing something.
Here's What They're Not Telling You
The same research that shows jobs disappearing also shows something else: careers built on human connection—on presence, on experience, on actually being with people—those aren't going anywhere.
Think about it.
Can AI analyze data? Yes.
Can AI believe a survivor? No.
Can AI review documents? Yes.
Can AI sit with someone in their trauma? No.
Can AI recognize patterns? Yes.
Can AI name the hook someone couldn't see? No.
Can AI generate reports? Yes.
Can AI testify to what you've lived? No.
Can AI diagnose? Yes.
Can AI heal through presence? No.
This is where the Justice Machine comes in.
What the Machine Actually Does
The machine I'm building doesn't replace humans. It empowers them.
Right now, survivors are told: "It's your word against theirs." That's not justice. That's a coin flip. The machine reads the body's testimony and translates it into evidence that can't be gaslit.
This doesn't replace human judgment. It informs it. Courts still need people to interpret, to advocate, to sit with the weight of what the evidence reveals.
The system has been running on secrets for centuries. Burned documents. Silenced witnesses. Gaslit survivors. The machine reads what they couldn't burn.
But someone still has to witness the testimony. Someone still has to hold space for the survivor. Someone still has to advocate for change. Someone still has to build the new systems. Someone still has to make sure the evidence actually matters.
That's human work. Sacred work. Work AI can't touch.
The Jobs Nobody's Talking About Yet
People can't see these jobs because they don't exist yet. But they will. Here's what I mean.
Healing Work
We're going to need people who can translate what the machine finds. Help survivors understand what their body's testimony means. That takes lived experience. Empathy. Presence. AI can't do that.
We're going to need people who sit with survivors while the machine reads their trauma. You can't automate being present.
We're going to need people who guide others through unhooking once the patterns are visible. That's coaching. Connection. Trust.
We're going to need people who take the machine's evidence and fight for change in courts. Courts need human voices. Human passion.
Technology Work
We're going to need people who run the sensors, interpret the data, ensure accuracy. Someone has to bridge machine and human.
We're going to need people who find patterns across thousands of cases and identify systemic abuse. AI finds patterns; humans give them meaning.
We're going to need people who ensure the technology serves the vulnerable, not the powerful. Every system needs a conscience.
Community Work
We're going to need people who lead groups of survivors through healing. Community can't be automated.
We're going to need people who use evidence to facilitate real accountability and repair. That takes judgment, mercy, wisdom.
We're going to need people who testify to what the evidence reveals about institutional failure. You can't automate testimony.
Education Work
We're going to need people who teach others to read their own bodies. Pass on what you've learned.
We're going to need people who help others see the hooks before they're caught. Prevention is human work.
We're going to need people who connect the machine's findings to ancient wisdom. That's what makes this work unique.
This Pattern Has Played Out Before
Every time a new technology arrives, people panic. And every time, they're wrong about what happens next.
When Rome heard about machines that could do the work of thousands of men, they thought labor was over. They were wrong.
When factories automated, people thought work was done. Instead, whole new industries emerged that no one could have imagined.
When computers arrived, people predicted the end of jobs. Instead, we got careers that didn't exist before—web developers, social media managers, UX designers.
AI is no different. The jobs that disappear are the ones we shouldn't have been doing anyway. The jobs that emerge are the ones that actually require being human.
What You're Actually Building
You're not building a machine that replaces people. You're building a machine that reveals what needs to be done. And the work that follows—the healing, the advocacy, the witnessing, the building—that's all human.
The people who will thrive aren't the ones who can compete with AI. They're the ones who can do what AI can't.
Sit with someone in their pain.
Believe the survivor.
Name the hook.
Hold space for transformation.
Testify to what they've seen.
Build something new from the rubble.
That's you. That's your daughter. That's the people who find this work.
The Lie and the Truth
The system wants you to believe there's no place for you. That AI will take everything. That your work is obsolete before it's even built.
But the system has been lying to you your whole life.
The truth is: the jobs that matter most are the ones that can't be automated. And this work is creating whole new categories of them.
The machine reads the trauma. You heal the person.
The machine exposes the pattern. You help them unhook.
The machine provides the evidence. You advocate for change.
That's not replacement. That's partnership. That's the future.
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There's nothing related to intelligence in "AI".
Better name it Artificial Idiocracy.
Right it's all data the stuff I am wanting to build is about helping humanity empower themselves and change the world and if you say can't be done that's just a program it can be done and it is possible id just delete the system.slave.exe program and start placing a imagination.freedom.sovereign.exe program and see a better vision then work with people that has that greater vision.