AI And American Workslop


Yessentuki The sky was supposed to fall. Look up. The clouds are still just as high, just as white and fluffy.

Kurduvādi America knows real economic catastrophe. The 2008 housing crisis sent unemployment from 5 percent to 10. The COVID pandemic drove it to 14. The dot-com collapse pushed it past 6. The early 1980s recession hit 9.7.

Each time, the numbers told the story. People lost jobs. The unemployment rate moved.

On November 30, 2022, OpenAI released ChatGPT to the public, Economists marked that date as the beginning of the artificial intelligence era in the American workplace.

Before that day, unemployment ran around 3.6 percent. Today it sits at 4.3. Less than a point of movement in three years. In any normal economic cycle, that is called Tuesday.

So the machines came. The numbers shrugged. Story over.

Except it isn’t.

The unemployment rate counts people who lost jobs. It does not count what those people are doing inside the jobs they kept.

By August 2024, nearly 40 percent of U.S. workers between 18 and 64 were using generative AI to some degree. On average, they reported saving 5.4 percent of their work hours, roughly two hours a week.

Two hours. Every week. Per worker. Saved.

The question nobody is asking: saved for what?

Researchers at BetterUp Labs, working with Stanford’s Social Media Lab, found that employees are using AI tools to create low-effort, passable-looking work that ends up creating more work for their coworkers. They call it workslop.

Workers reported spending nearly two hours dealing with each instance of it. For an organization of 10,000 employees, the cost runs over nine million dollars a year in lost productivity.

The machines did not make us obsolete. They made it easier to look busy.

But the deeper damage is not in the office. It is in the mind of the person who used to want to work.

A generation has been primed on an AI lifestyle. They grew up getting reactions on the internet and confusing the dopamine hit for accomplishment. The new employment mantra has drifted from look what I’ve done to just look at me. Aren’t I pretty? Radical? Outspoken?

The resume has been replaced by the follower count. The portfolio by the feed.

This is not an economic story. It is a character story. AI did not change the job market. It changed the worker inside it. It gave ambitious people a tool to go faster. It gave everyone else a place to hide.

A report from the MIT Media Lab found that 95 percent of organizations see no measurable returns from AI investment. Billions spent. Productivity flat. The technology works. The people using it have decided not to.

The unemployment rate is fine. That was never the right number to watch.

Watch what gets produced. Watch the quality of the work landing in inboxes, on desks, in front of clients. Watch what happens when the tool is doing the thinking and the human is just hitting send.

The numbers show a minor blip. The behavioral change toward work ethic is the real threat to the American economy. The machines did not take our jobs. We did.

AI didn’t change the American workforce; it changed the American worker.