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Thursday, April 23, 2026

AI Took the Training Wheels Off the Job Market

How AI Could be the Silent Entry-Level Job Killer

It used to be that immigrant labor was the go-to scapegoat for America’s ‘disappearing’ jobs. “They’re taking our work!” became the rallying cry from factory floors to campaign trails. But today, the threat isn’t crossing borders—it’s crossing code.

AI has emerged as a silent job killer in the country. It’s automating cashiers, replacing warehouse workers, screening out resumes, and even moving out admin and data entry roles. Yet at the same time, some tout it as a revolutionary tool that’s creating new tech jobs, pushing innovation, and streamlining productivity.

Both can be true. But while tech firms celebrate AI’s efficiency, what’s indisputable is the huge workplace shift in its wake—especially in entry-level sectors seen as a gateway to the American Dream.

Are Entry-Level Jobs Disappearing?

Fast food kiosks, self-checkout lines, customer service bots, tech support and much more are all cutting down the need for human labor in the exact roles many rely on for first-time or career entry-level employment. This trend is leading to a “broken” career ladder for many as AI can now perform tasks previously considered entry-level “grunt work” and developmental opportunities. 

AI Jobs Aren’t Replacing What’s Lost

And while AI is creating jobs—in machine learning, software engineering, data labeling, etc.—those roles demand skills and access that are narrow to access. Many of these new AI-sector jobs require advanced degrees, expensive certifications, or tech backgrounds that remain out of reach for the very communities losing traditional work. Without targeted investment in reskilling, the tech revolution risks deepening economic inequality.

Protect the Working Class

The working-class have long relied on entry-level jobs as a foot in the door, the training wheels of learning to ride a bike. These jobs are more than paychecks—they’re training grounds, stepping stones, and safety nets.

We must protect entry-level pathways, invest in equitable reskilling programs, and demand transparency in AI-driven hiring tools.

Alana Zarriello
Alana Zarriellohttps://saobserver.com
Raised in San Antonio, Texas, Alana Zarriello earned her bachelor's degree in Political Science from UTSA. She is an avid history buff who finds the connections from past to present.

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