Artificial Intelligence is not a natural force but a man-made disruption. Tech oligarchs dream of production without labor — capital and machines generating wealth without people. To soften the blow, they promote Universal Basic Income, but always leave the question of funding abstract. This is no accident. By framing unemployment as a “social problem” to be solved by government, they privatize profits and socialize losses.

Like CO₂ pollution, AI-driven unemployment is a form of social pollution. The principle must be clear: the polluter pays. If society accepts the oligarchs’ framing, we risk a new feudalism of capital-only production and human irrelevance. If we resist, we can demand an AI dividend: a rightful share of the wealth created by technology, ensuring not only survival but recognition and dignity in a post-labor age.

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By 2032, machines may be able to do almost everything better and cheaper than people. Work, once the anchor of wages and recognition, could vanish. Governments might keep citizens alive through universal dividends, but survival is not the real crisis — recognition is. Without work or consumption as proof that we matter, people risk falling into despair, extremism, or digital illusions of fame. Yet this crisis also opens a path: to rediscover that “all you need is less” and that true wealth is not in endless goods but in recognition, belonging, and creation. This may be the time of Eidoism.

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As the cost of humanoid robots drops below critical thresholds, we approach a tipping point where machines can economically replace all forms of human labor—everywhere on earth. The true revolution begins when robots not only perform work, but also autonomously build and repair each other, unleashing a self-replicating wave of automation. This shift, driven by global market pressures, financial instability, and social unrest, will forever change the balance between capital and labor and force society to confront a future beyond traditional work.

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