Starting off the week, I spoke to a group of interns at the earliest stages of their careers in journalism. It is tempting on occasions like that to reminisce. After all, when I was their age, reporters smoked in newsrooms, had green lampshades, and composed their stories on manual typewriters.
But if interns want to know about that distant past stuff, they can read novels or watch old black-and-white movies. My agenda when spending time with them is to talk about their future.
And in that context there are two items in the news I’d recommend to anyone concerned with the future of work, both in the near-term when nobody drives any longer and robots dominate most workforces, and well beyond that.
The first item, courtesy of Martin Abraham in Malaysia is an article in Psychology Today titled “Humans Are Fast Evolving Into an Astonishing Lifeform” by Dr. Eric Haseltine.
According to this article:
We have entered an era of hyper-communication that may be rapidly changing the human species.
Evolutionary biology suggests we may be evolving into super-organisms that limit our individual autonomy.
Loss of autonomy has lead to recent social unrest from aggregations such as globalization and immigration.
As of 2025, young Americans aged 18-24 got an average of 109.5 texts per day, sent 40-50 themselves, checked their phones 46-74 times a day, and if they are teens got an average of 240 notifications a day from apps. Adults got an average of 117 professional emails a day.
All the rest of us averaged a third of the time we were awake glued to our electronic communications devices.
What this may be doing to us at home and work is the article’s focus.
***
The second recommendation I have about the future of work comes courtesy of John Jameson. It is an excellent half-hour interview by Amy Goodman of Democracy Now with journalist Karen Hao, who has written a new book called “Empire of AI.”
Hao finds examples of people around the world using AI in limited, positive ways and casts doubt on whether AGI (artificial general intelligence) is really imminently within our grasp.
She believes, as do other experts I’ve recommended on the topic, that under proper human control, AI tools will perform tasks in ways that will make the future not an apocalypse but a brighter place.
At least as a speaker (I’ve not yet read her book), Hao has an unusual ability to make AI accessible to the lay person. Plus the interview left me feeling much more hopeful about our future with robots.
We all need to know where our society is going, well beyond when we’re part of it. These articles offer some clues.
(This one is reprised from this week last year.)
HEADLINES:
At the NATO Summit, Trump declares Iran ceasefire is ‘over’ (NPR)
U.S. Launches New Strikes on Iran, Military Says (NYT)
Inside Trump’s Oval Office Decision to Ditch the Iran Ceasefire (WSJ)
Sabre-rattling to ‘tremendous love’: erratic Trump dominates final hours of Nato summit (Guardian)
‘We may just do it without a deal’: Trump muses about new blockade in Strait of Hormuz, taking over Kharg Island (Yahoo)
In shift, Trump praises Zelensky, will let Ukraine build Patriot missiles (WP)
NATO pledges 70 billion euros for Ukraine as Trump praises peace ‘progress’ (Al Jazeera)
Denmark says it will defend Greenland as Trump threatens to revive NATO crisis (WP)
Platner Suspends Senate Bid in Maine After Rape Accusation (NYT)
Platner’s disastrous candidacy exposes rifts that could dampen Democrats’ Senate hopes (BBC)
McConnell health update demanded by Gov. Beshear as Senate vacancy questions grow (CNBC)
Judge Orders $5 Million Trump Judgment Be Released to E. Jean Carroll (NYT)
The game theory of replacing Graham Platner (Silver Bulletin)
Global Economy, Hit by Iran War and Inflation, Faces Sharp Slowdown (NYT)
A Mexican father was shot and killed by an ICE officer. His son is demanding an independent probe (PBS)
Judge Convicted of Obstructing Immigration Agents Faces No Prison Time (NYT)
The Ukraine Lesson Taiwan Keeps Missing (Foreign Affairs)
I Built a Self-Improving AI, and So Can You (Wired)
Meta Unveils an A.I. Image Generator (NYT)
OpenAI set to launch most capable GPT model after delayed rollout. (Reuters)
Crowd Boos After Little Boy Steals Foul Ball From Adorable 42-Year-Old Man (Onion)