AI is no longer coming, it’s already here, and it’s replacing jobs faster than most people realize.
In this video, Ryan “Dickie” Thompson breaks down the reality of artificial intelligence, automation, and the future of work from a first-person perspective. After years working in automation and now using AI daily in real business at Veracity Life, this is not theory, this is happening right now.
We cover:
Why resisting AI won’t stop it
How AI is already replacing artists, writers, and workers
The real threat behind AI, not just job loss but control
The coming collapse of traditional wage labor
The uncomfortable truth about Universal Basic Income
Why learning AI is now survival, not optional
This is a raw, honest look at the future of work, freedom, and human relevance in an AI-driven world.
If you’re not paying attention to AI right now, you are already behind.
Everyone’s arguing about AI like it’s either the greatest thing ever…
or the end of humanity.
That’s the wrong frame.
Here’s the truth.
AI is both.
It can free people from work, scale human creativity, and unlock things we’ve never been able to do before.
Or…
it can centralize power, replace livelihoods, and tighten control in ways most people aren’t even thinking about yet.
Same technology.
Different incentives.
That’s not an accident.
In this video, I break it down from both sides:
How AI can actually improve human life
Why job replacement isn’t the real issue
Where UBI fits in… and where it fails
How centralized systems turn tools into control mechanisms
Why open source and decentralization matter more than ever
And how a “kill switch” concept could protect your voice, your data, and your ideas
Here’s the part nobody talks about.
AI doesn’t decide what it becomes.
We do.
Or more specifically…
the systems controlling it do.
I’ve been building, scraping, and training models for years. Long before this wave hit mainstream.
I’ve seen how platforms shift behavior.
I’ve seen what censorship actually looks like behind the curtain.
In this video, I talk honestly about discussing weight and obesity with my children. Obesity and early death have affected our family for years, and after recently losing a close family member at a young age, the issue feels more urgent than ever.
This is not about body shaming. It is not about appearance. It is about health, longevity, and breaking a family pattern of preventable disease.
My daughters have said they feel like I put them down about their weight. I explain my perspective, why that was never my intention, and how hard it is to talk about obesity without it being taken as criticism.
I also share my own struggles with weight gain after a serious car accident and how that changed my body and lifestyle. This is a conversation about love, responsibility, and the fine line between warning and shaming.
Topics covered:
• Obesity as a preventable cause of death
• Family history and early mortality
• Talking to kids about weight without shaming
• Health vs appearance
• Parenting and difficult conversations
• Personal weight gain after injury
• Breaking generational health patterns
This is about protecting your children, not controlling them. Health conversations are uncomfortable, but ignoring real risks does not make them disappear.
If you are a parent struggling to talk about obesity and family health history with your kids, this discussion may help.
As Seen On Rumble: https://rumble.com/user/Disruptarian