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The debate about whether AI will take jobs is over. It has taken them.One hundred and thirty thousand customer service positions lost in a single year, documented by the Bureau of Labor Statistics. An Israeli study measuring real unemployment rising among programmers and sales professionals directly attributable to AI adoption. Tech companies citing artificial intelligence explicitly in layoff announcements. The language has shifted. The euphemisms are gone.The Last Promotion is not about the future of work. It is about what is already happening to the workforce — in wages, in hiring patterns, in supply chains, in classrooms, and in boardrooms where the math on replacing humans with AI has already been run and the decision has already been made.Written by Lon Forehand — AI policy analyst with 24 years of Congressional affairs experience, NASA policy veteran, and founder of the AGI Coming Soon publication — this is a book for workers, business owners, educators, and policy makers navigating the most consequential economic transformation in living memory with maps that have not been updated.At approximately 34,000 words across nine chapters, The Last Promotion is a focused, direct read — substantive enough to document the full scope of the transformation, short enough to read before the next round of layoff announcements.The headline AI story is wrong. Job loss is real, but the more dangerous story is what happens to the workers AI keeps — and what happens to their wages, their leverage, and their bargaining power when a machine can do a passable version of what they do. This is the hidden tax: a sustained, distributed erosion of worker power that arrives without a headline, registers in no single layoff announcement, and is built into every salary negotiation from now on.Small businesses are forming at record rates — and hiring less. High-propensity business applications surged while applications with plans to hire employees fell in the same period. The AI stack available to a two-person startup covers functions that required a team of twelve just two years ago. The ladder that was held out as the alternative to the factory floor is losing its lower rungs.Supply chains and warehouses have already been transformed. Autonomous AI agents are making sequential decisions across procurement, inventory, and routing before the operations manager has finished their morning briefing. Education is failing the transition in real time — credential systems awarding qualifications for roles that are contracting, retraining programs designed for a slower-moving disruption, regulatory frameworks years behind the technology they are supposed to govern.Every chapter ends with specific, named actors, concrete mechanisms, and honest timelines — because the workers, employers, and institutions navigating this transformation do not need more urgency. They need to know exactly what to do.Who this book is for: workers who thought they had one more cycle of stability before needing to reconsider how they work and what they are worth; employers using macroeconomic conditions as cover for structural decisions already made; educators whose students are training for a labor market being rebuilt under them; and policy makers reading lagging data about a leading problem.The Last Promotion is the second book in the nine-volume AGI Coming Soon series.
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