The Window Is Closing (Please Like and Repost)
Source: Miles Deutscher on X

Miles Deutscher, crypto trader and proprietor of a "multi-million dollar trading portfolio & 30+ employee businesses," has thoughts about the two classes of people who will exist by 2030:
Group A) An overclass that leverages AI to automate income, build wealth, and make critical decisions at a speed no human can compete with alone. Group B) A permanent underclass that gets managed by Group A.
The data cited is real — PwC's wage premium figures, Goldman's displacement estimates — and the directional argument holds up. AI skill-building compounds. Early movers will have an advantage. Worth understanding.
Then there's the practical framework. Step one: "Shift Your Mindset." Step four: climb to "Basket #4 (AI consulting + distribution)" to "get filthy rich." And crucially, step two: "Stay In The Know" — specifically, by following @milesdeutscher, who posts about this constantly and will be "breaking down the exact workflows" he uses to run his trading portfolio if you stick around.
The Goldman Sachs number he cites for workforce displacement risk is 6–7%. The conclusion he draws from it is "only two classes of people will exist." That gap between evidence and claim is not a rounding error — it's the whole architecture of the piece.
The 6–12 month closing window claim is presented as analysis. It is a sales technique. So is framing economic anxiety as a personal choice: adopt early or deserve what you get. The K-shape framing, borrowed from legitimate macroeconomics, does the job of making that moralising sound rigorous.
The last line: "If you found this post helpful, please Like/Repost this article so others get the chance to see it."
Group A leverages AI. Group B gets managed. Group C wrote the article about it and needs the engagement to grow his list.
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