The Great Lie: âAI Wonât Take Your Job, But Someone Who Knows How to Use It Willââ (AI Mafia Substack)
đ§© Introduction
We are going to challenge one of the most repeated phrases of our time: âAI wonât take your job, but someone who knows how to use it will.âWhile it sounds motivational and partly true, the author argues that itâs dangerously simplistic.
AI doesnât just automate tasks â it redesigns entire systems of work. That means even people who use AI might lose out if they donât understand how itâs changing the structure of value.
To explain this, let us use a powerful historical analogy: the French Maginot Line, a perfect defense that turned out to be useless when the nature of warfare changed. The same thing is happening now: believing that learning to âuse AIâ is enough is like building a perfect defense for a war thatâs already over.
âïž Lie #1: âIf I learn to use AI, Iâll be safeâ
This first lie assumes that jobs are just fixed sets of tasks that AI can automate or improve. But when the system changes, the value of those tasks can disappear entirely.
The example of shipping containerization shows this clearly â it didnât just speed up cargo handling, it restructured global trade. Some ports became irrelevant overnight.
So the question isnât whether AI will do your job better, but whether your job will still exist in the new structure of work. Learning AI is necessary, but itâs not enough; you must understand how itâs reshaping the system that gives your job meaning.
đž Lie #2: âMy position and salary are safeâ
This illusion of job stability is outdated. AI doesnât just eliminate jobs â it can also drastically reduce their value.Take the example of session musicians: music streaming created more demand than ever, but it drove average incomes down.
The same âcommoditizationâ of talent happens with AI. As more people can perform at the same level using AI, work becomes less valuable.Keeping your job doesnât guarantee keeping your pay. In fact, as you use AI more, you train it to do what youâre paid for â eventually reducing the uniqueness of your own skill.
đ Lie #3: âAI will make our processes faster and cheaperâ
This phrase assumes that todayâs processes will stay the same, just more efficient. But history proves otherwise: automation often makes processes irrelevant. Telephone operators disappeared not because machines made their work faster, but because the entire workflow was replaced by automatic switching.
AI doesnât optimize workflows â it often replaces them completely. The real value lies in redesigning systems from scratch, not improving outdated ones. Companies that âoptimizeâ instead of reinventing are like France perfecting its Maginot Line while Germany invented Blitzkrieg â technically perfect, but strategically useless.
đ Lie #4: âAI will boost my productivity and make me more valuableâ
This is the productivity trap. Being more productive doesnât always mean earning more, especially during system shifts. In many industries, the gains from productivity go to whoever controls the coordination layer, not to individual workers. In textiles, productivity doubled thanks to new machines, but value went to aggregators like Shein â not to factory workers.
The same will happen with AI: benefits will flow to those who control the models, data, and infrastructure, not to the people who simply use the tools.
đ§° Lie #5: âAI is just a toolâ
AI isnât neutral. Every tool changes who decides and who executes. Excel gave more power to data analysts in the 1990s; AI goes much further, potentially replacing entire objectives.
AI agents can break down goals, assign resources, and act autonomously. As they take over more execution, human roles shrink.This reshapes hierarchies and power structures within companies. AI doesnât just help workers â it redraws the map of power inside organizations.
đą Lie #6: âCompanies will adopt AI and everything will keep working the sameâ
Most companies see AI as an âadd-onâ â something to make processes more efficient. But thatâs a mistake. AI isnât just a feature; itâs a new operating system for decision-making and coordination.Organizations that simply âadd AIâ without rethinking their structure are making the same error as France with its Maginot Line â improving something that no longer matters.
đ Lie #7: âAI wonât take your job, but someone who knows how to use it willâ
The truth: winners arenât those who use the tool best, but those who understand the new game. When word processors replaced typewriters, typists didnât lose to faster typists â they lost because typing itself stopped being a specialized skill.
The key is to identify the constraint that makes you valuable today and ask: will that still exist in three years? If not, youâre defending the wrong battlefield.
đ§ The Danger of âUseless Truthsâ
Phrases like âAI wonât take your job, someone using AI willâ are comforting but strategically dangerous.They sound smart but distract us from the real questions: how AI is changing systems, coordination, and value chains?
They give a false sense of understanding and prevent deep thinking. The real transformation doesnât depend on the tool, but on who first understands the new logic of coordination.
đĄ Conclusion: Itâs not about using AI â itâs about redefining the game
Systemic change takes time, but itâs inevitable. As Seneca said, imagining possible losses prepares us emotionally and builds resilience.The key lesson: itâs not enough to use AI â you must understand how it changes the system you work in.Those who survive and thrive wonât be the ones who know the most prompts, but those who realize first that the rules of the game have already changed.




