AI, Automation, and the War on the Working Class

in Informationwar13 hours ago

output.jpg
AI generated image!

Next year the big tech companies in the US are forecast to spend up to a trillion dollars on research into developing artificial general intelligence. We are currently in the midst of the biggest technological revolution in human history which is developing at a pace which even scientists in the field find difficult to keep up with.

The next decade is not merely bringing a technological revolution. It is ushering in a brutal, calculated war on the working class, waged with the cold, unfeeling logic of algorithms and robotics. Artificial Intelligence and robotics are not neutral tools of progress. In the hands of tech billionaires they are the ultimate weapons in the capitalist arsenal, designed to eliminate the most expensive and troublesome element of production: the human worker.

The threat is no longer a distant sci-fi fantasy. It is a clear and present danger, poised over the livelihoods of hundreds of millions. To ignore this is to surrender the future of work to the insatiable greed of the capitalist class.

This is the grim reality that has forced even the founders of this new technology to sound the alarm. Geoffrey Hinton, the so-called "Godfather of AI," has stepped away from his lucrative position at Google to warn the world about the monster he helped create. Hinton’s message is unequivocal: tech giants are "betting on AI replacing a lot of workers". He warns that the rapid expansion of AI will cause massive job losses and "deepen inequality".

AA1RIQuc.jpg
Tech giants are “betting on AI replacing a lot of workers,” warns Geoffrey Hinton—but adds that 10 years out, “We have no idea what’s going to happen.”

This is a profound political and economic crisis driven by the desire of the ruling class to eliminate contradictions inherent in their system and maximise profit by eliminating wages.

The many warnings from AI scientists are now being echoed in the political arena. In the US, Senator Bernie Sanders has released a stark report which warns that AI, automation, and robotics could replace 100 million jobs in America over the next decade. This is a forecast of economic devastation on a scale not seen since the Great Depression. Sanders correctly frames this as an unprecedented threat that Congress must address immediately. The corporate narrative of "reskilling" and "new jobs" is a cruel lie designed to lull workers into complacency while the foundations of their economic security are systematically dismantled.

Amazon's Automated Assault on the Warehouse Worker

output.jpg
AI generated image

The most chilling evidence of this corporate assault is already visible in the warehouses of Amazon, the undisputed titan of modern logistics. Amazon is not just using robots to make work easier; it is using them to make workers redundant. The company’s internal automation team has made it clear that their goal is to systematically reduce the need for human labour. By 2027, Amazon expects its automation efforts to allow it to avoid hiring over 160,000 people in the United States alone. This is not a job cut in the traditional sense; it is the calculated annihilation of future employment opportunities.

Further internal memos suggest the company’s fleet of robots could eliminate the need to hire for some 600,000 future jobs. The message is clear: the capitalist class views the human workforce as a temporary, inefficient inconvenience to be replaced by machines that do not need wages or sick pay. When Amazon recently announced initial cuts of some 14,000 jobs, they were tied directly to "efficiency gains" from AI software. This is the blueprint for the next decade: a ruthless, technologically-driven purge of the workforce, all in the name of shareholder value.

The Global Race to the Bottom: Worker-Free Factories in China

LATEST-2025-03-19T225115136_enhanced-1536x806.png.webp
Dark Factories

The automation crisis is not confined to Western capitalism. It is a global phenomenon, and nowhere is the future of the worker-free factory more advanced than in China. Driven by a combination of demographic shifts and a relentless pursuit of industrial dominance, China has become the world’s leading installer of industrial robots, accounting for over 54% of global installations last year.

The result is the rise of the so-called "dark factory"—facilities so automated they can operate with the lights off, because no human eyes are needed. Companies like the manufacturing giant Foxconn have been at the forefront of this shift, famously replacing approximately 60,000 factory workers with robots in a single instance. The sheer scale of this replacement is staggering. Estimates suggest that robots will replace over 14 million people in China’s manufacturing sector alone by 2030. This is the ultimate realisation of the capitalist dream: production without the need for a proletariat, a system where the profits of labour are captured entirely by the owners of the machines.

The Urgency of Protest: Why Unions Must Mobilise

The evidence is overwhelming. The capitalist class, armed with AI and robotics, is preparing to launch the greatest assault on workers’ rights and livelihoods in history. Yet, where is the commensurate level of protest? Where is the mass mobilisation from the trade union movement?

Workers and their unions must understand that this is not a moment for polite negotiation or timid lobbying. This is a fight for survival. The automation of the workplace is a direct attack on the very foundation of the union movement: the collective power of human labour. If the jobs disappear, the unions lose their leverage, and the working class loses its voice.

Protest is essential because it forces the issue into the public consciousness and challenges the false narrative of inevitable progress towards a dystopian future. It is the only way to demand that the immense wealth generated by these new technologies is not hoarded by a handful of billionaires but is instead used to benefit the society that created it.

A Note of Hope: Demands for a Worker-Centric Future

Despite the bleakness of the current trajectory, the future is not yet written.

output.jpg
AI generated image

The power of organised labour, when mobilised, remains the most potent force for change. The unions must move beyond defensive actions and put forward a bold, transformative set of demands that reclaims the benefits of AI powered automation for the many, not the few.

Senator Sanders has already laid the groundwork for this new workers’ agenda, and his proposals could form the basis of the labour movement’s discussion of this issue:

  1. The Four-Day Work Week

The wealth generated by AI and automation must be translated into shorter work weeks with no loss of pay Increased productivity should mean more leisure time for workers, not mass unemployment.

  1. The Robot Tax

A tax on the use of automated systems and robots. This revenue must be used to fund a robust social safety net, universal basic services, and retraining programs for displaced workers

  1. Universal Basic Services

The immense productivity gains should fund universal access to healthcare, education, and housing, decoupling basic human needs from the increasingly precarious labour market.

  1. Worker Ownership and Control

Unions must demand a seat at the table in all automation decisions, with the right to demand worker re-training and profit-sharing is in place.

We stand at a critical crossroads. On one path lies the dystopian vision of the AI tech oligarchs of the US, where they become fantastically richer, more powerful, and closer to 'god-like powers' courtesy of their control of superhuman AI. This is a future of mass unemployment, extreme wealth concentration, and a new form of digital feudalism.

The other path is a humanist one, where AI and robotics are used as a force for societal good, uplifting workers by granting them shorter working weeks and enabling a world where human want can become a relic of the past.

The choice is not technology versus Luddism; it is capitalist oligarchy versus humanity.
The fight against the digital guillotine is the defining struggle of our time. It is a fight not against technology itself, but against the capitalist class that seeks to weaponise it for their own enrichment. The workers of the world must unite, protest, and demand that the future of automation is one of shared prosperity, not mass destitution.