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The Career Redundancy in the Age of Intelligent Machines

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The Career Redundancy in the Age of Intelligent Machines

De: Boris Kriger
Narrado por: Jack Watson
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Every morning, billions of people drag themselves out of bed to perform tasks that a machine could do better, faster, and without existential dread. They commute for hours, attend meetings that could have been emails, fill out forms that no one reads, and return home too exhausted to wonder why. They were told this was life. They were told wrong.

The Career Redundancy in the Age of Intelligent Machines is a provocative manifesto that refuses to pretend the crisis of work and education is a problem to be managed. It is a liberation to be seized. Boris Kriger argues that humanity already possesses the technological means to free itself from meaningless labor, obsolete schooling, and the tyranny of artificial scarcity —yet deliberately chooses suffering over freedom, because the institutions that profit from human dependency refuse to let go.

This book dismantles the myths that keep the old system alive: that diplomas guarantee prosperity, that jobs define human worth, that automation is a threat rather than a gift, and that people freed from forced labor would simply do nothing. It exposes the hostage economy —a world in which populations are held captive by political and financial interests that manufacture difficulty where none need exist. And it demands, with the force of evidence and the clarity of outrage, a different future: universal basic income funded by transaction-based taxation, education reimagined as personal exploration rather than factory training, and artificial intelligence embraced as humanity’s most powerful ally rather than its replacement.

©2026 Boris Kriger (P)2026 Boris Kriger
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