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This week's signal across every sector — defense, fintech, enterprise AI — points to the same pattern: the organizations deploying AI fastest are simultaneously increasing their investment in human expertise, not decreasing it. Goldman hires an AI agent AND expands engineering. The Pentagon mandates AI-first AND creates human oversight committees. Nubank launches an AI advisor AND hires more human support specialists for edge cases.
The conventional narrative — AI replaces humans — is being quietly contradicted by what the smartest companies are actually doing. The real shift isn't automation replacing people. It's automation revealing which human capabilities were undervalued all along: judgment under ambiguity, stakeholder alignment, the ability to know when the model is confidently wrong. If you're building or investing in AI, the question isn't "how many humans can we cut." It's "which humans just became 10x more valuable."
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