The CEO’s Reassuring Fantasy
Jensen Huang, Nvidia’s perpetually optimistic CEO, took the stage at the Milken Institute this week to deliver a familiar gospel: AI is not coming for your job, it’s creating an “enormous number” of them. Speaking with MSNBC’s Becky Quick, Huang dismissed the mounting anxiety over mass labor displacement as a misunderstanding. He argued that while AI might automate specific tasks, the overall function of a human worker within an organization remains intact. This is a convenient narrative for a man whose company is the primary arms dealer in the AI hardware gold rush, selling the chips that power the very factories he claims will employ us all.
The Doom Loop He Helps Fuel
The irony is thick. Huang warns against “science fiction stories” that make AI unpopular, yet the AI industry he champions has spent years hyping apocalyptic capabilities to attract investment. Critics rightly point out that this manufactured panic about superintelligence is often just marketing. Meanwhile, sober analysis from financial institutions projects up to 15% of U.S. jobs could vanish due to AI in the coming years. Huang’s sales pitch feels less like a forecast and more like a plea to keep the assembly lines running without a worker revolt. The man selling the shovels in a gold rush always insists the digging is safe.
Source: Techcrunch
