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Ferrets are Cool

(22,711 posts)
Thu Feb 26, 2026, 10:14 PM 17 hrs ago

They just cut 4,000 workers because of AI. 40% of workforce. Who is going to buy stuff when no one has a job?

&t=518s

Block is the culprit. The market loves it.
18 replies = new reply since forum marked as read
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They just cut 4,000 workers because of AI. 40% of workforce. Who is going to buy stuff when no one has a job? (Original Post) Ferrets are Cool 17 hrs ago OP
Auto makers found out about that 25 years ago. They never learn. Srkdqltr 17 hrs ago #1
While the industry can be cyclical, the data doesn't show much of a decline in sales over time MichMan 15 hrs ago #11
Your numbers need context Bob_in_VA 14 hrs ago #13
Sales went up 2 million units from 2000-2007 compared to the 1992-1998 period MichMan 8 hrs ago #16
who is "they" nt msongs 15 hrs ago #12
Block is Jack Dorsey, the guy who sold Twitter to Musk. Here are your customers. usonian 17 hrs ago #2
Unregulated Capitalism ends the same way the board game Monopoly does Tim S 16 hrs ago #3
And nuclear warfare and/or mass unrest are the equivalent of someone knocking the game board flying. ChicagoTeamster 16 hrs ago #5
I just read an article where Meta, Amazon, Google, Microsoft and other mega companies are going to DC Deuxcents 16 hrs ago #4
Are renewables going to be part of those plans? appmanga 16 hrs ago #9
Robots and AI's are going to send us their paychecks, right? thought crime 16 hrs ago #6
That is what I always ask. Blue Full Moon 16 hrs ago #7
Step Right Up Kid Berwyn 6 hrs ago #18
Maybe this kind of disruption is what it finally takes... appmanga 16 hrs ago #8
would be nice if more people woke up Skittles 16 hrs ago #10
4 disgusting pieces of shit own GDP collapsing wealth. Initech 14 hrs ago #14
I feel like this is gonna hit the white collar workers (like myself) more than anyone, especially programmers. FascismIsDeath 11 hrs ago #15
One other thing that few seem to realize. Robots don't pay taxes. Ferrets are Cool 7 hrs ago #17

MichMan

(16,993 posts)
11. While the industry can be cyclical, the data doesn't show much of a decline in sales over time
Thu Feb 26, 2026, 11:51 PM
15 hrs ago

1999 there were 16,893,700
2025 there were 16,233,360

https://www.statista.com/statistics/199983/us-vehicle-sales-since-1951/

Bob_in_VA

(136 posts)
13. Your numbers need context
Fri Feb 27, 2026, 01:10 AM
14 hrs ago

US population
2000 - 281+ million
2020 - 331+ million
These are US Census numbers
I suspect that with 50+ million more people in this country, all other things being equal, the number of sales should reflect, even if imperfectly, the roughly 16% increase in the population size over that 20 year period. The fact that it doesn't, that it actually shows a very small decrease might well indicate that the poster you were responding to is closer to being correct than you are.

MichMan

(16,993 posts)
16. Sales went up 2 million units from 2000-2007 compared to the 1992-1998 period
Fri Feb 27, 2026, 07:30 AM
8 hrs ago

According to the post I replied to, they should have been going down if increased use of automation destroyed customer demand as speculated. The data doesn't support that assertion.

If sales tracked population, we would have seen a steady increase annually in the preceding 20 years from 1976-1996, which isn't the case as sales were relatively flat.

Tim S

(145 posts)
3. Unregulated Capitalism ends the same way the board game Monopoly does
Thu Feb 26, 2026, 10:41 PM
16 hrs ago

In the real world, it means palaces behind armed gates for the winners and poverty for everyone else.

Bernie had it right. Billionaires should not exist. It’s just wealth-hoarding. I think it really is a mental illness.

ChicagoTeamster

(728 posts)
5. And nuclear warfare and/or mass unrest are the equivalent of someone knocking the game board flying.
Thu Feb 26, 2026, 10:45 PM
16 hrs ago

Deuxcents

(26,366 posts)
4. I just read an article where Meta, Amazon, Google, Microsoft and other mega companies are going to DC
Thu Feb 26, 2026, 10:42 PM
16 hrs ago

In March to sign deals allowing them to build their own power plants for their AI data centers. How many jobs will be lost when that happens? Where are they gonna go for the power grids and water supplies? Are we gonna be a society where technology is the norm and people will no longer be needed to run the country? No human ingenuity? Cameras everywhere..even in the Can?

appmanga

(1,451 posts)
8. Maybe this kind of disruption is what it finally takes...
Thu Feb 26, 2026, 11:22 PM
16 hrs ago

...for the middle-class and working-class in this country to put aside the bigotry and stupid types of self-interest and start raising some hell against the exploitative ultra-rich.

Skittles

(170,639 posts)
10. would be nice if more people woke up
Thu Feb 26, 2026, 11:32 PM
16 hrs ago

and figured out it ain't trans folk or immigrants causing your misery

Initech

(108,345 posts)
14. 4 disgusting pieces of shit own GDP collapsing wealth.
Fri Feb 27, 2026, 01:35 AM
14 hrs ago

And it isn't enough for these pieces of shit. They want it all. And they will leave us in the dust to get it. They can all go get royally fucked.

FascismIsDeath

(123 posts)
15. I feel like this is gonna hit the white collar workers (like myself) more than anyone, especially programmers.
Fri Feb 27, 2026, 04:33 AM
11 hrs ago

And that has been my profession for over 25 years now. Its my career. I borrowed money for the degree. I paid it all back. I'm 46 years old and starting over really isn't something that is an option unless we (my wife and myself) sell our house and move outside of the city we've lived in this entire time, which would put her at a disadvantage travelling to her job, which might get replaced with AI too, who knows.... she audits business loans . Her only saving grace the notion of introducing AI to sensitive banking data has a lot of legal hurdles.

I've seen what some of these AI tools can do for software development. I've had to study them and learn them. With all my experience, I know exactly how to use it to make it generate quality code under my own guidance. And its really good at figuring out bugs if you give it the right info. Its scary. Right now, it still needs human guidance and knowledge of whatever you are guiding it to do but there may come a day where that isn't the case.

We need to be cracking down on it somehow. The data centers and their environmental impact, the models that are trained on stolen data and any part of it that threatens our economic stability. There have to be regulations and there needs to be legal enforcement of copyright laws and there needs to be targeted taxes on certain models that are used do certain things that could blow a whole through our jobs economy.

Ferrets are Cool

(22,711 posts)
17. One other thing that few seem to realize. Robots don't pay taxes.
Fri Feb 27, 2026, 08:24 AM
7 hrs ago

This country is headed for disaster, all fueled by greed and the desire for power.

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