Open any business feed this month and you’ll see the same headline wearing a dozen different logos. Oracle cutting tens of thousands. Snap trimming another slice. Block reshaping itself and watching the stock climb the same afternoon. Different companies, different numbers, but almost all of them reach for the same three-word explanation:
AI did it.
I want you to notice what those three words are doing. They turn a decision into a weather event. Nobody chose anything. Nobody is accountable. A force of nature swept through the org chart, and management was just standing there holding an umbrella. It’s tidy. It’s clean. And more often than the headlines admit, it isn’t true.
Here’s what I’d actually pay attention to, though, because it’s useful. Watch how a company talks about this — not whether they cut, since nearly everyone is, but how they describe it. Some own the decision plainly: here’s the call we made, here’s why, here’s who it affects. Others reach for the machine. Some are genuinely ready, moving real capital toward an AI future. Some are calling layoffs a strategy when they’re really just a funding mechanism. And some, I have reason to believe, cut the people first and went looking for the reason afterward. I can’t always tell from the outside which is which — but the framing gives them away. The difference between a company that owns its choices and one that hides behind a machine is stark, and it’s usually sitting right there in the press release. I’m not saying corporations are evil. I’m saying there’s a real gap between the good ones and the bad ones, and how they narrate this exact moment is one of the clearest tells you’ll get.
But whether they’re lying or just hiding, I don’t want to spend this piece litigating it — because for your purposes, it doesn’t matter which. That’s the easy essay, and it’s the less important one. Those three words aren’t only excusing the people who wrote them. They’re quietly trying to take something from you: the belief that any of this is still in your hands.
Agency or abdication
When leadership frames a decision as inevitable, that’s abdication. They made a choice about where money flows and whose livelihood absorbs the cost, and then they dressed that choice up as destiny so no one would ask whether it was a good one. Agency or abdication — there is no third option. They picked abdication. That’s on them.
You do not have to accept the same frame for your own life. Their honesty is their problem to answer for. Whether they owned the cut or hid it behind a machine changes nothing about the one thing that stays yours no matter what they do: the responsibility for what you build next. That doesn’t transfer to them. It never did, and no press release can take it from you.
Perspective is everything here, and I mean that almost literally. Two people can read the exact same headline. One reads it and hears: you are a line item, and deletion is coming. The other reads it and hears: the institutions are telling on themselves — so I’d better be the one thing they can’t hand-wave away. Same words. Same economy. Completely different life, depending on which one you decide is true.
The value you build is yours. The skill you sharpen is yours. The way you show up, adapt, and make yourself genuinely harder to replace — no quarterly announcement controls that. It was never theirs to automate.
What’s still yours
I talk a lot about augmentation over abdication when it comes to these tools, and usually I’m aiming it at how we use AI. But it cuts the same way for a career. Abdication is waiting to see what gets decided about you. Augmentation is picking up the same tools these companies are betting billions on and becoming more capable, more valuable, more undeniable because of them.
I won’t pretend that’s armor. Doing everything right doesn’t make you bulletproof — plenty of people augmented fully, made themselves indispensable by every reasonable measure, and still got cut because a spreadsheet needed a number. What the work buys you isn’t immunity. It’s mobility. The person who kept getting sharper walks into the next room with something to offer; the person who waited walks in with a story about what was done to them.
Not because a company will notice and reward you. Maybe it will, maybe it won’t. You do it because it’s yours to do, and because the alternative is handing your sense of worth to people who’ve already shown you they’ll blame a machine rather than own a decision.
For the people actually in it
I want to be careful, because there are real people behind those numbers, and they’re carrying real loss right now. This is not a pep talk that pretends nobody got hurt. Plenty did.
But the most respectful thing I can offer anyone standing in that spot isn’t it was inevitable. That’s the lie. The honest word is the opposite: it wasn’t inevitable — and your next move still belongs to you. Your worth was not calculated by a model. It was never on the ledger they were cutting from.
The companies want you to believe a machine decided your value. Don’t give them that. Your agency was never theirs to automate — and in a season where so many institutions are abdicating theirs, yours matters more than it ever has.
