Here’s the English presentation-style version:

Let’s go back for a moment to when we were 20 years old.

Think about that time — when we were just stepping into the real world, a world full of questions, fears, hopes, and choices.
Back then, many of us didn’t know exactly what we wanted.
And even if we did, the future didn’t change this fast.

But today?

Today, the future is moving at a speed no generation before us has truly experienced.

And the main reason for that acceleration is one thing:

Artificial Intelligence.

AI feels like a fast-forward button for human civilization.

Things that once took years can now be built in weeks.
Ideas that once required an entire company can now be executed by one person with one laptop.

Programming, design, research, analysis, content creation, education, marketing — everything is being redefined.

But the real question is not:

What can AI do?

The real question is:

What will we do in a world where AI does most of the work?


History has taught us one thing:

Jobs have always disappeared.

Once we were hunters.
Then farmers.
Then blacksmiths, weavers, factory workers, office workers, programmers.

Every wave of technology has erased jobs.

But every time, it created even more.

So the real issue is not job loss.

The real issue is the speed of change.

And AI is the fastest wave in human history.


What makes AI different from every tool before it?

The iPhone was a tool.
The internet was a network.
The steam engine was a machine.

But AI?

AI is the first tool that can think, decide, learn, and even build new tools.

That means we are no longer just building tools.

We are building the builder of builders.

And that is one of the most fundamental shifts in human history.


Should we be afraid?

Yes… and no.

Yes, because many current jobs will likely disappear:

  • Low-level programming
  • Basic content writing
  • Repetitive analysis
  • Basic customer service
  • General translation
  • Administrative work

But no, because AI does not only destroy jobs — it creates them too.

In the near future, the world may be filled with:

  • Billion-dollar one-person companies
  • Independent entrepreneurs managing teams of AI agents
  • Human experience designers
  • AI systems architects
  • AI ethics advisors
  • Digital culture creators

Who does the future belong to?

Not to those who fight AI.

But to those who collaborate with it.

In the future, knowledge alone will no longer be a competitive advantage.

Because AI will make knowledge accessible to everyone.

The true advantage will be:

  • Creativity
  • Judgment
  • Vision
  • Taste
  • Ethics
  • Leadership
  • Human connection

These are the things machines struggle to imitate.


What happens to the economy?

This may be the biggest question.

If only a few companies own the most powerful AI models, wealth will concentrate into very few hands.

And that is dangerous.

The future may move toward models like:

  • Universal Basic Income (UBI)
  • Public ownership in AI systems
  • AI dividends for everyone
  • Token-based distributed ownership economies

Because if AI becomes the infrastructure of civilization, everyone should own a part of it.


My prediction?

In the next 20 years:

AI will handle:

  • Coding
  • Research
  • Analysis
  • Automation
  • Initial production

And humans will focus more on:

  • Meaning
  • Culture
  • Innovation
  • Relationships
  • Guiding the future

Future jobs may look like leisure to us.

Just like today’s jobs would have looked strange to our ancestors.


And in the end, the most important question of the future will not be:

“What can AI do?”

It will be:

“Who benefits from what AI does?”

And the answer to that question will shape the future of our world.