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Fresh grads will be fine regardless. You're okay to start over from scratch at 25. 42 on the other hand is tough

I feel for the mid-career people with families to support. Can't imagine how stressful that would be



This is a fresh perspective for me. I'm around 25 and have been struggling with finding some kind of path towards making my career into something sustainable long-term, but never really considered the other side. I think the issue many have on my end is that they don't really have much of anything to stand on while they rebuild yet, whereas they might think that someone more experienced could pivot to business and people-oriented roles by leveraging what they have now. I know many people personally struggling to find work as it is right out of school, and many have student loans which exacerbate the situation. For a lot of people, starting from scratch is not realistically feasible in the near future unless they're content with being homeless for a while.

Of course labor jobs will always exist, and a 25 year old would (on average) be much more physically able for that than someone older, so it goes both ways.


Consider people in their 40s have..

A mortgage: if you were assuming a strong income that would continue, you very likely could be forced to sell your house and take a huge loss

A family, kids: people relying on you

Time: at this point you have retirement plans and financial deadlines you need to hit if it's to ever become a reality

God forbid you have any health issues that cost $$$ which tend to come as you age. Can you afford to lose health insurance?

If you think about re-skilling and starting off at entry level.. people don't really want to hire older beginners.

Of course that's absolute worst case scenario, but I guarantee there are a lot of people there.

I'd 100% choose living out of my car for a while. In your 20s you can upend everything and completely reinvent yourself. Time, minimal responsibilities and energy are priceless

> could pivot to business and people-oriented roles by leveraging what they have now

There's a reason that's really vague, right? Because who knows if it'll be available

I don't think AI is gunna reach this point but who knows. It's not off the table


If enough people have nothing left to lose, the French Revolution will most likely be the outcome. Or a working UBI. If programmers aren't safe, I can't imagine most other professions won't be on the chopping block as well.

There's a lot of this forum in exactly that position. The fear is real; there is a real risk this AI destroys families and people's lives in the disruption.


I understand this perspective, but it's like... I would like to have a house and kids and all those things you mentioned, even if it was hard. That's not an option, financially, for a lot of young people



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