The AI Panic Ignores Something Important — the Evidence

Last week, a post written by tech entrepreneur and investor Matt Shumer went viral on social media. Titled, Something Big Is Happening, it was a rundown of all the ways artificial intelligence would, in short order, decimate professional jobs. Tools like Claude Code and Claude Cowork from Anthropic PBC would displace the work of lawyers and wealth managers, he wrote. To get ready, we all needed to practice using AI for an hour a day to upskill ourselves and keep ahead of the tsunami.

The post ripped through the Internet and has been seen more than 80 million times on X. In the words of the young and very online, people are shook. Shumer’s post has struck a nerve in the middle of huge selloffs of finance and software companies whose products seem ripe for replacement.

That market meltdown is one reason the public may be particularly vulnerable to dramatic storytelling about AI right now. Another is that many are tinkering with the latest tools, spinning up a website in hours with Claude Code or using its newer cousin Cowork to answer LinkedIn messages. Collective awe at the agents’ remarkable capabilities has triggered another ChatGPT moment — and soul searching about “what it all means” for our livelihoods.

But the viral reaction to Shumer’s post also helps explain the market turmoil: AI is trading on vibes and anecdotes.

Of the 4,783 words in Something Big Is Happening, none point to quantifiable data or concrete evidence suggesting AI tools will put millions of white-collar professionals out of work any time soon. It is more testimony than evidence, with anecdotes about Shumer leaving his laptop and coming back to find finished code or a friend's law firm replacing junior lawyers.

Some critics claim the author has made exaggerated claims in the past about tech, but that is beside the point. A single compelling story about AI has created ripples of worry just when the market has become so narrative-driven that it’s giving investors whiplash. One minute AI is overhyped and the next we’re on the verge of the singularity.

Remember in mid-November 2025 when the Dow fell nearly 500 points? Or the following month, when shares in Oracle Corp. and CoreWeave Inc. dropped? In both cases the market was rattled by concerns that an AI bubble was on the verge of bursting.