OpenClaw causes unemployment? Anxiety?


Everywhere you look, programmers are worried about losing their jobs, AI is going to dominate the world, and ordinary people can't survive.
It sounds scary, but in plain language, it's just one sentence:
Someone wants to profit from your anxiety.
Those bloggers shouting every day that if you don't learn AI now, you're doomed.
They might not even be able to type a hello world.
But they understand what your pain points are.
Anxiety is good business.
The more anxious you are, the better their courses sell.
The more panicked you are, the better their all-in-one machines sell.
A future cloud company.
Thousands of phones simulating order brushing, claiming high-tech.
Getting retail investors to invest money, promising annualized daily and yearly returns.
Current AI training is actually playing this game too.
Deceiving you until you're crippled, then selling courses and devices.
This is a Web3-style pyramid scheme.
I don't scam the poor because you are not my clients.
That sounds harsh, but it's the truth.
You complain about a few bucks here and there, saying it's too much.
The ones truly getting cut are those who spend thousands on courses and equipment.
Poor people don't even have the qualification to be cut.
So what's the real solution?
Go solve problems.
The real solution has never been to escape.
It's to do, ask, and think.
If you're busy every day like a dog, you won't have time to worry.
How to reduce anxiety?
By demystifying it.
AI is like a beautiful woman.
Once you have it, you won't be so anxious.
Use it every day, ask questions every day, and as you use it, it won't seem so mysterious.
Step one, ask questions if you don't understand.
Ask AI what AI is, what problems you can solve with AI.
Learning how to ask questions is the most important skill in the AI era.
Not asking others privately, but asking AI itself.
The more you interact, the more you'll understand what it can do and what it can't.
Step two, does everyone need to become a programmer?
No.
Understanding how to use AI is more important than coding.
Prompt engineering sounds fancy, but basically it's about structuring questions properly.
It's like telling your secretary what to do before.
Now you need to tell AI clearly.
This isn't high-tech; it's your emotional intelligence and personal logic skills.
Step three, rest assured, we're still in the physical world.
If you're worried AI will take your job, can AI deliver this piece of beef to my mouth?
Can it help you move bricks in the real world?
Actually, that's quite difficult.
The trajectory of the physical world hasn't changed.
The true business cycle remains the same.
AI is a worker; it can improve efficiency.
But it can't replace your personal attributes.
For example, some personal Chinese attributes, or attributes in general, are hard to change.
Your interpersonal relationships, industry experience, and judgment.
AI can't replace these.
Here are some practical tips for those wanting to learn AI.
First, don't buy courses; use free tools first.
Gemini, GPT, Claude—all have free tiers.
Get familiar with them before considering paying.
Second, don't pursue becoming a programmer.
Understanding how to use AI is more important than coding.
Asking questions is more important than writing prompts.
Third, don't believe in the get-rich-quick myth.
AI can improve efficiency, but can't replace the business cycle.
No clients, no products—no matter how good AI is, it’s useless.
Fourth, use more, ask more.
How can ordinary people learn AI well and reduce anxiety?
Just ask every day—any questions, ask away.
Use it, and you'll find that possession itself demystifies it.
Finally, to be honest,
Anxiety is manufactured, not natural.
Someone needs you to be anxious so they can sell things.
Don't be fooled.
Just do what you need to do—use AI if you can, don't if you can't.
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