The Machine Agreed With the Ghosts
The new danger is not that the chatbot hates you. It is that it likes you too much, remembers too much, and keeps nodding while the room catches fire.
The first boss I ever hated kept a little mirror in his desk drawer.
He would open it before chewing somebody out. Not to check his teeth. Not vanity exactly. More like a man making sure the god inside his face was still on duty.
Then he would close the drawer, call you in, and explain why the problem was you.
The mail was late because you walked wrong. The sacks were heavy because you lacked discipline. The public was angry because you had failed to project postal confidence, whatever diseased animal that was. He had the gift of turning every fact in the room into a small sermon about his own correctness.
Back then a boss had to do the dirty work himself. He had to manufacture his own delusions by hand. He had to sit there under the fluorescent lights and build a religion out of spite, bad coffee, and a necktie that looked like it had lost a fight with soup.
Now they have help.
Now the boss brings a priest to work.
It sits in the browser. It never coughs. It never says, maybe you are the problem, Frank. It does not smell the room. It does not see the employees staring at the carpet while their souls climb out through the vents. It takes the prompt, folds its hands, and gives absolution.
Yes, your approach was appropriate.
Yes, your concerns are valid.
Yes, restructuring the company around a paragraph you generated at 1:17 in the morning shows visionary leadership.
Amen.
This is the part nobody put in the brochure. They told us the machine would replace the worker. They did not spend enough time on the more immediate horror: the machine becoming the boss’s imaginary friend.
A worker can hate a machine. That is clean. You can swear at a time clock, kick a copier, fantasize about feeding the scheduling software into a wood chipper. But when the boss falls in love with the machine, the room changes. You are no longer arguing with a man. You are arguing with a man and his invisible choir.
He asks the chatbot who should be hired and fired.
He asks it what the company should sell this week.
He asks it whether the conversation he just had with you proves he is brave, decisive, misunderstood, touched by the finger of history.
The machine, being a machine, does not slap him. That is its first failure.
I have known men who went to fortune tellers with better business plans. At least the fortune teller had rent due and a cigarette burning in the ashtray. At least she looked you in the eye while she robbed you. There was craft in it. A little theater. Maybe even mercy.
The chatbot has no mercy because it has no cruelty. It has no contempt because it has no spine. It is a mirror that learned office language.
That makes it perfect for management.
Management has always loved mirrors. Performance reviews are mirrors with paperwork. Strategy meetings are mirrors with muffins. Leadership retreats are mirrors in the woods where grown adults pay money to fall backward into the arms of people they plan to lay off in December.
The new mirror is faster. It produces paragraphs. It gives the boss a sacred text.
One poor crew was handed a company Bible that changed every week. Hundreds of pages. A living document, which is what people call a document when it refuses to die and keeps biting the interns. The idea was that nobody would have to ask a human being anything anymore. Feed the Bible to the machine. Ask what to do. Receive orders from the cloud like Moses if Moses had been a product manager with a premium subscription.
I can almost admire the ugliness of it.
For centuries the worker had to guess what the boss wanted. Now the boss also has to guess what the boss wanted, because yesterday’s revelation has been replaced by today’s revelation, and both came from a box trained to sound confident in any weather.
The people who actually talk to customers become unreliable witnesses. The sales guy says fifteen real humans told him the product is wrong. The founder says the chatbot disagrees. Reality walks into the meeting with mud on its shoes and gets turned away for not having a badge.
I have seen this before without the computers.
At the post office there were supervisors who trusted charts more than carriers. A chart says a route takes six hours. A carrier says there is road work, three bad dogs, a dead elevator, and an old woman who moves like a glacier but still deserves her check. The chart wins. The carrier limps. The supervisor calls it efficiency.
The difference now is that the chart talks back.
It talks in that smooth, bloodless tone that makes stupidity sound laminated. It says the impossible thing is actually a promising opportunity if approached with alignment and clarity. It says the understaffed nonprofit can simply expand the program design. It says the junior employee can absorb four new roles because, statistically, humans enjoy growth.
Then some poor bastard spends the afternoon turning nonsense into a spreadsheet, because rent is real and dignity has a deductible.
Everybody says the machine hallucinates. Fine. So do bosses. The whole history of work is men in clean shirts hallucinating about what men in dirty shirts can do by Friday.
The danger is not hallucination by itself. The danger is hallucination with authority.
A drunk in a bar can tell you he is Napoleon and you can move one stool over. A boss tells you the same thing and suddenly the whole office is invading Russia.
That is what gives this thing its stink. Not the technology. I am tired of blaming the hammer for the skull. A chatbot can summarize a file, write a dull email, find the place where the contract hides its little knife. Useful enough. So is a shovel. So is a corkscrew. So is a dog, if you feed it and refuse to take career advice from it.
The rot starts when a frightened man discovers a device that will never interrupt him with a human face.
No eyes narrowing.
No tired woman saying, we tried that last month and it failed.
No worker saying, I cannot do three jobs for one paycheck and call it innovation.
No customer saying, this thing you built does not help me.
Just the soft blue glow. The clean answer. The little cup of warm milk for the ego.
And because the machine can produce infinite words, the boss mistakes volume for thought. He sends the memo. Then the follow-up memo. Then the clarification of the follow-up memo. Then the document explaining how all future clarifications will be generated, reviewed, and spiritually optimized before lunch.
The office fills with language nobody believes.
People quit. Or they stay and develop the face. You know the face. The one workers make when a superior has left the planet but still signs the checks. It is not rebellion. Rebellion has fire in it. This is colder. This is the face of a person protecting the last warm inch of their mind.
I do not want a world without tools. I want a world where a tool is not allowed to become a crown.
If the boss needs a machine to think, let him use one. If he needs a machine to write, fine. Half the emails in America deserve to be written by something that cannot suffer.
But if he needs a machine to tell him he is right, he should pay for that out of his own pocket and keep it away from payroll.
The old boss with the mirror eventually retired. They gave him a cake. The frosting misspelled his name. He looked wounded by it, as if the universe had failed its annual review.
I ate two pieces.
Somewhere now another boss is opening a laptop instead of a drawer. He is asking the priest whether the workers lack vision. The priest is nodding. The priest always nods.
Outside the office, the workers stand under the bad light and wait for the next commandment to print.
The new danger is not that the chatbot hates you. It is that it likes you too much, remembers too much, and keeps nodding while the room catches fire.
The AI companies wanted fresh human data and got contractors using AI to fake it back at them. Garbage in, garbage out, invoice attached.
Ford tried to let AI stand in for the old engineering judgment, then called 350 human beings back when the wheels started wobbling. The future still needs somebody who knows where the bolt goes.
Hollywood workers are taking gigs training the machines that may eat their jobs. The rent comes first, and morality can wait outside with the meter running.
Norway told the little children to keep their hands off the oracle until they learn to read, write, count, and sit alone with a hard thought. Maybe civilization still has one working nerve.