You’re right: critical roles in healthcare, emergency services, hospital IT — they’re not being filled.
Not because they aren’t needed.
Because the system doesn’t reward filling them.
It rewards cost-cutting, higher margins, shareholder returns.
So we automate hiring with AI…
…to justify not hiring humans.
The machine isn’t the problem.
It’s the excuse.
We’re moving from a system that grew rich by exploiting people — with CEOs earning hundreds of times more than their workers — to one that thinks it can grow rich by eliminating workers altogether.
But if everyone cuts staff…
who will buy the goods?
And when no one has money,
who will buy what AI produces?
You’re right: critical roles in healthcare, emergency services, hospital IT — they’re not being filled.
Not because they aren’t needed. Because the system doesn’t reward filling them. It rewards cost-cutting, higher margins, shareholder returns.
So we automate hiring with AI… …to justify not hiring humans.
The machine isn’t the problem. It’s the excuse.
We’re moving from a system that grew rich by exploiting people — with CEOs earning hundreds of times more than their workers — to one that thinks it can grow rich by eliminating workers altogether.
But if everyone cuts staff… who will buy the goods?
And when no one has money, who will buy what AI produces?