The Billionaire’s Comforting Tale
Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang took to the Milken Institute stage this week to deliver a familiar corporate sermon: AI is not coming for your job, it is creating an enormous number of them. In conversation with MSNBC’s Becky Quick, Huang painted a picture where new AI factories, the kind that buy his company’s chips, will need endless human workers. This is a convenient narrative for a man whose company’s valuation depends on selling the picks and shovels of an AI gold rush that many economists project will eliminate up to 15% of U.S. jobs.
Huang attempted to soothe anxiety by splitting hairs between a “job” and a “task,” arguing that automating a specific function does not erase the broader need for the employee. It is a neat rhetorical trick, but one that ignores the brutal reality for call center workers, translators, and illustrators already displaced by generative AI. The real innovation here is not in labor policy, but in PR spin.
The Manufactured Panic Paradox
Perhaps the most galling moment came when Huang worried that “science-fiction stories” about AI domination are making the technology so “unpopular” that Americans will refuse to engage with it. This is a stunning piece of revisionist history. The AI industry, including many at Nvidia, has spent years amplifying the most outlandish doomer scenarios as a marketing tactic to suggest their products are more powerful than they are. Now that real workers are scared about real layoffs, the billionaires want to change the script.
The cognitive dissonance is staggering. Huang’s chipper optimism stands in direct opposition to the data from reputable financial institutions and academic studies predicting significant labor dislocation. The real anxiety is not driven by dystopian fiction; it is driven by a parade of earnings calls where tech executives promise to cut headcount and replace it with AI subscriptions. Telling workers not to worry because you, a tech mogul, say so is not a solution. It is an insult.
Source: Techcrunch
