Transcript detail

Loading...

Public transcript context with linked callsigns, related nets, and analysis metadata.

Back to transcripts
-Node
-Created
-Confidence
-AI Passes
-Analysis Steps

Transcript

Public transcript text

Yeah, I'm not sure if there's anything we can do about it. The companies are going to be using that to try to bring down costs and they're going to have to bring down costs because no one's going to have a job anymore so they're going to have to bring down the cost in order to be able to sell their products. It's a double-edged sword I think. It's like the buggy business. The buggy business was driving there for a while then all of a sudden cars came out and the buggy business went away and then the next thing came along. They had all these people working in warehouses and I think a big loss in the warehouse section, especially in the United States, wasn't overseeing SEA, wasn't outsourcing their capacity but a lot of it was, or some of it anyway, was automation. They were able to have machines come in and do the work that the people were doing so they ended up having to learn other jobs. It's a progressive thing where some new technology comes along and makes an old technology obsolete and if that was your job then you got to find a new job either in the new technology or doing something else. It's progressive but it's something we all have to eventually deal with and I'm glad I'm at the towards the end of my working career and anything after what I'm doing now is going to be just supplemental and it'll be some easy stuff, a whole lot greater or something. I don't have to worry so much about AI but definitely younger people have a whole different set of skills and separate things they have to learn and do in order to earn a living. I'm sure they'll adapt and make the best of it like we did when we were young. There you go.

Explore

Linked public records