Writing ยท AI / Automation / Tech
๐ง๐ต๐ฒ๐โ๐ฟ๐ฒ ๐ฎ๐๐๐ฎ๐ฐ๐ธ๐ถ๐ป๐ด ๐ฑ๐ฒ๐น๐ถ๐๐ฒ๐ฟ๐ ๐ฟ๐ผ๐ฏ๐ผ๐๐ ๐ป๐ผ๐.
Thousands of cooler-sized bots are delivering burritos and sushi across 20 American cities. And people are tipping them over, shaking them down for pad thai, and trying to throw them off bridges.
In Chicago, 3,300 residents signed a petition to ban them. Notre Dameโs student paper called for a boycott. In San Francisco, crowds set a Waymo robotaxi on fire during Lunar New Year. One guy was charged with repeatedly attacking Waymo cars, stomping windshields while passengers sat inside.
This is not new behavior. Weโve seen this exact pattern for 200 years.
In 1811, English textile workers called the Luddites started smashing factory machines. We use their name as an insult now, meaning โanti-technology.โ Thatโs wrong. They were skilled craftsmen who watched factory owners use new machines to slash their wages and bypass labor standards. They didnโt hate the looms. They hated that nobody offered them a path forward.
The British government sent 12,000 troops. Made machine-breaking punishable by death. Executed 17 men. Then rewrote the story so โLudditeโ meant โstupid person afraid of progress.โ
When ATMs rolled out in the 1970s, bank tellers at Barclays snuck outside and smeared honey on the keypads.
Hereโs what I think many analyzing AI and robotics adoption is underweighting.
The bottleneck to widespread rollout wonโt just be chips and power. Those are engineering problems. Engineering problems get solved. The real friction is political. And political friction compounds.
Once these technologies start producing visible job losses (not theoretical ones, real ones with real faces and real voters), the pattern from history will repeat. Workers organize. Politicians respond. Regulations appear dressed up as public safety. Entire industries get slowed for years or decades.
Study history and one thing becomes clear. Technology rollouts that displace workers are never clean. Theyโre messy, uneven, and politically volatile.
Early adopters will build cost advantages their competitors canโt see yet. Profits spike. Copycats rush in. Then the backlash arrives. From employees. From unions. From voters who elect people promising protection.
The technology wins eventually. It always does. But the timeline between โthis worksโ and โthis is everywhereโ is way longer and uglier than any adoption curve on a consultantโs slide deck.
The people smearing honey on ATM keypads in 1975 and tipping over delivery robots in 2026 are telling you the same thing. Adoption is a human problem, not a technology problem.
If youโre building with AI and automation right now, good. Youโre early. But donโt confuse being early with the world being ready.