Tomorrow's tech news, today's hangover.

The Future Needed a Plumber

I spent the morning trying to hang a shelf.

This is not a metaphor yet. It was a shelf. A cheap board with two brackets and the moral confidence of a parole officer. I had a screwdriver, a level, three screws, and the deep private belief that a man who has survived rent, divorce, the post office, and several governments ought to be able to put wood on a wall.

The wall disagreed.

The first screw went in crooked. The second found nothing behind the plaster but dust and the ghosts of better tenants. The third vanished from my hand and rolled under the stove, where all small objects go to start new religions.

I stood there with my arms hanging down and thought about the machines.

Not because a chatbot could hang the shelf. It could not. It could tell me how. It could draw a diagram. It could explain anchors and studs and load-bearing capacity in that calm little voice that makes ignorance feel supervised. It could generate a poem in the style of a man who never had to spackle anything.

But it could not climb the chair.

It could not swear when the bracket slipped.

It could not feel that small hot humiliation of being beaten by drywall before breakfast.

This, apparently, is the part of the future nobody wants to finance.

For years they told the kids to learn to code. Learn to optimize. Learn to network. Learn to sit in a chair and move symbols around until the money noticed. They built whole temples around clean hands. The guidance counselors pointed toward college like priests pointing toward heaven. Parents nodded. Politicians nodded. Men in zip vests nodded from stages where the lighting cost more than a welder’s first truck.

Then the machine learned to move the symbols too.

Now everybody is standing around looking surprised, as if surprise were not the national anthem.

The college kid cannot get the entry-level job. The recruiter cannot find the nurse, the mechanic, the teacher, the construction worker, the person who can keep an old man breathing or a bridge from becoming a headline. The office jobs are crowded with frightened applicants carrying degrees like damp tickets. The physical jobs sit there with their mouths open, waiting.

They are not glamorous mouths.

They smell of oil, disinfectant, sawdust, coffee gone cold in a paper cup. They start before sunrise. They ruin knees. They do not come with kombucha taps or a chief happiness officer. Nobody writes breathless profiles about the woman changing a bedpan or the guy in a crawlspace listening to pipes knock like bad neighbors.

But when they do not show up, civilization gets very honest very quickly.

A society is a body. Not a pitch deck. Not a platform. Not an ecosystem, God help us. A body. It needs hands. Backs. Feet. Eyes that notice smoke where smoke should not be. People who know which valve to close and which wire not to touch. People who can lift, carry, cut, mend, clean, teach, drive, bandage, and stay calm while everyone else discovers that their apps have no muscles.

We mistook the nervous system for the whole animal.

That is what the computer age did to our heads. It convinced us that the signal was the substance. The email was the work. The dashboard was the factory. The meeting was the decision. The strategy document was the bridge.

Then the bridge needed bolts.

The great joke is that the machine panic and the labor shortage are arriving at the same party wearing each other’s coats. The young white-collar crowd hears that AI is coming for the first rung of the ladder, and they are not wrong to worry. A ladder without a first rung is just decoration. You can hang it in the lobby and call it opportunity.

Meanwhile the old country underneath the lobby is aging, retiring, breaking down, and asking who exactly is going to take care of all these bodies, houses, roads, wires, chips, furnaces, engines, and classrooms.

The answer from the smartest men in the room is usually software.

Software is beautiful. I am not one of those old cranks who thinks every useful thing ended with the rotary phone. Software can find the cancer, route the ambulance, translate the warning, count the pills, catch the defect, and tell a tired worker where the leak might be hiding.

But software still needs somebody to walk into the room.

Somebody has to put the sensor on the chest. Somebody has to turn the wrench. Somebody has to teach the child whose stomach hurts because breakfast was a rumor. Somebody has to weld the frame and inspect the plane and hold the hand of the patient who has no family left except a nurse on the night shift making less than a consultant charges to say transformation.

There is a poster somewhere on an unfinished building that says, Finish this, ChatGPT.

I would like to buy the bastard who made it a drink.

Not because it solves anything. It does not. A joke is not a workforce policy. A slogan will not train an electrician. But it has the rude clean shape of truth. It points at the hole in all the talk. It says the future is not just a glowing box on a desk. The future is also a man in boots standing in weather, wondering why everyone with clean shoes got paid first.

We did this to ourselves with both hands and a scholarship brochure.

We told kids there were smart jobs and dumb jobs, which was a dumb thing said by smart cowards. We made trade work sound like punishment for failing algebra. We turned college into a tollbooth and then acted shocked when the road behind it filled with wreckage. We imported the people willing to do the hard work, underpaid them, blamed them, needed them, and then rolled up the welcome mat like kings of an empty castle.

Now the castle has plumbing problems.

Good.

Not good for the people trapped in it. Not good for the exhausted nurse or the kid with debt and no offer letter or the old immigrant aide lifting another old American out of bed while politicians use both of them as furniture. I mean good in the older, nastier sense. Good like a fever that finally proves the infection was there.

Maybe this is the moment when the country remembers that labor is not a theory.

Maybe it remembers that dignity does not come from a lanyard.

Maybe it looks at the 22-year-old welder with no debt and a paycheck and sees not a consolation prize but a man who read the room before the room collapsed.

Or maybe we will do what we usually do. We will invent a new phrase. Human infrastructure. Skills realignment. Essential workforce activation. We will build committees. We will print reports. We will ask the machine to summarize the reports because nobody with power has time to read about the hands they forgot to value.

After lunch I found the missing screw under the stove.

It was covered in grease and dust, wearing the gray little coat of everything that has been ignored too long. I washed it in the sink. I drilled a new hole. I used an anchor this time. The shelf went up crooked anyway, but it went up.

There are many futures like that.

Not elegant. Not optimized. Held by a bracket, a guess, and a pair of hands that still have to do the last dirty inch.


Source: Why recruiters can’t find workers and new grads can’t find jobs (it’s not AI)

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