
Blogger Comment: This is where AI is leading humanity…havin g no real purpose at all and whatt the Globalists have been aiming for over the last 54 years in earnest with the creation of their insane World Economic Forum driving all the gears and world totally against humanity with their insane thinking and mindsets…the problem is, is that we are funding iur iown demise and principally through outr own money…taxation that we all pay to our western governments where our leaders are controlled by the WEF Globalists in Davos…look it up and do your research if you do not believe it…but sources that are independent knowledge sources of course and NOT from our ‘legacy’ MSM, as they are all owned lock, stock and barrel by the Globalists and only allow you to know what the Globalists will only allow you to know…their own propoganda…period
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Yoshua Bengio, one of the world’s most influential artificial intelligence researchers and a pioneer of modern deep-learning systems, is warning that the rapid advance of AI will eventually make every job category vulnerable to automation, including skilled trades long assumed to be resistant to technological replacement.
Bengio, whose work helped lay the foundation for today’s AI revolution, says it is only a matter of time before artificial intelligence and robotics advance far enough to compete not just with office workers and knowledge-economy professionals, but with plumbers, electricians, construction workers, and other hands-on trades.
Desk jobs, or as Bengio called them, “cognitive jobs, the jobs that you can do behind a keyboard,” will be the first casualties of automation.
“It’s just a matter of time” before all jobs are replaced with AI-driven automation, Bengino stressed on Steven Bartlett’s Diary of a CEO podcast.
“Unless we hit a wall scientifically, like some obstacle prevents us from making progress to make AIs smarter and smarter, there’s going to be a time when they’ll be doing more and more, able to do more and more of the work that people do …
“And then, of course, it takes years for companies to really integrate that into their workflows, but they’re eager to do it.
“So it’s more a matter of time than, is it happening or not?”
His assessment reflects growing concern inside the AI research community that the pace of progress is moving far faster than most policymakers and most workers are prepared to confront.
For years, economists and technologists widely assumed that physical trades would remain insulated from large-scale automation because they require dexterity, improvisation, and the ability to work in unpredictable environments.
Bengio, also known as the “Godfather of AI” due to his pioneering work in the field, now challenges that belief.
He is arguing that once AI is combined with machine vision, robotics, and advanced sensor systems, even complex physical work may become automatable.
Tasks that today seem impossible for machines, he suggests, may become routine sooner than the public expects.
At the heart of Bengio’s warning is a simple economic reality: once automated systems become cheaper, more reliable, and more scalable than human labor, businesses will face overwhelming financial incentives to adopt them.
That calculus applies across industries and job categories, regardless of the social consequences.
Under that framework, Bengio argues, widespread job displacement is not a hypothetical scenario but an eventual inevitability.
The technology will only get smarter as more firms lean on AI and eventually robots, too, he said.
“As companies are deploying more and more robots, they will be collecting more and more data,” Bengio said when asked whether AI will replace all human workers.
“So eventually, it’s going to happen.”
Even young people trying to outsmart automation by ditching degrees or upskilling into trade jobs are destined for the same dead end.
“So if you do a physical job—as Geoffrey Hinton is often saying, you should be a plumber or something—it’s going to take more time [for AI to replace your job], but I think it’s only a temporary thing.”
Such a shift carries far-reaching implications.
If both white-collar professions and blue-collar trades face long-term automation risk, long-standing assumptions about career stability, including the belief that learning a trade offers reliable protection from economic disruption, may no longer hold true.
Education models, workforce planning, and the broader meaning of work itself could be forced to undergo fundamental change.
Bengio does not present a single policy prescription but stresses the urgency of preparing for a future in which traditional employment may no longer serve as the primary foundation of economic security.
Debates over universal basic income, expanded safety net models, and large-scale retraining programs have become more common as governments attempt to anticipate the fallout, although there remains little agreement over how such systems would be funded or implemented.
Critics of Bengio’s outlook point to earlier technological revolutions, arguing that innovation historically created more jobs than it eliminated, even if transitions were difficult.
They contend that AI will augment human work rather than replace it entirely, generating new roles that do not yet exist.
Bengio acknowledges that historical precedent, but cautions that artificial intelligence represents a fundamentally different class of technology, one capable of competing with both human cognitive abilities and physical labor simultaneously.
He and other AI researchers warn that dismissing that distinction could leave societies unprepared for the most disruptive labor transformation in modern history.
Follow the link for the source… https://slaynews.com/news/pioneering-ai-scientist-sounds-alarm-matter-time-every-single-job-replaced-automation/