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Starting from 2027, the largest "unemployment wave" in history may occur.
Recently, a very harsh prediction has been circulating in Silicon Valley:
Humankind is about to enter a 15-year period of "hell mode."
This statement comes from former Google executive Mo Gawdat.
He once led Google X laboratory,
became a millionaire at age 29,
and has almost entirely experienced and driven
the entire explosion cycle from the Internet to AI.
The point isn't how successful he is,
but that he is someone who has personally opened Pandora’s box.
When someone like that tells you:
"Hell is coming,"
it's much more warning than just typical negativity.
The "hell mode" he refers to centers on one core idea:
This unemployment wave is unlike any previous technological revolution.
In all past revolutions,
although old jobs were destroyed,
new jobs were always created.
• Industrial Revolution: loom workers lost their jobs, but mechanists emerged
• Internet Revolution: typists disappeared, but programmers and designers appeared
But this time, it might not.
Because AI is not just about "replacing a certain job,"
but about replacing human participation in production itself across all aspects.
If the production process no longer requires humans,
then the issue isn't just "what new skills should you learn,"
but
whether society still needs so many people.
This is the truly chilling part.