Block's layoffs represent the largest percentage-based job cut of any S&P 500 company in history.
Jack Dorsey Fired Half of Block. The Stock Pumped 30%. AI Is Replacing Your Job. | GodModePod EP02
Jack Dorsey fired half of Block because AI is more productive than people — and the market rewarded him with a 30% stock surge.
God Mode Podcast
Jack Dorsey Fired Half of Block. The Stock Pumped 30%. AI Is Replacing Your Job. | GodModePod EP02
Jack Dorsey fired half of Block because AI is more productive than people — and the market rewarded him with a 30% stock surge.
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Insight distribution
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This episode
Cast
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CEO of Block who announced cutting half the company's workforce due to AI productivity, causing a 30% stock surge.
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All-In Pod producer Jason Calacanis was cited as the inspiration for naming their AI agent 'Nick' and as a potential investor in their OpenClaw podcast SaaS.
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Referenced in a debate about whether AI models should run locally or in the cloud, with Chamath arguing for cloud data centers.
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Discussed as having made a generational AI comeback, releasing Nana Banana 2 and dominating image generation and workspace AI.
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Jack Dorsey's fintech company that fired half its staff citing AI productivity, with its stock rising 30% on the news.
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AI company behind Claude, discussed for disrupting public markets through capability announcements and leading agentic AI use cases.
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AI search company that announced Perplexity Computer, an agentic browser tool that can vibe-code apps like a Bloomberg terminal.
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Discussed as a competitor to Google and Anthropic, seen as pursuing the personal AI assistant lane with ChatGPT.
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Financial research publication whose viral 2028 AI bear-case article formed the backbone of the real estate and UBI discussion.
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Design tool discussed as potentially threatened by Claude's improving design capabilities and AI-driven alternatives.
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Design software company cited as being down 30% year-on-year due to AI disruption of creative and design workflows.
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Project management SaaS company discussed as being down 70% year-on-year due to AI making its tools easily replaceable.
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CRM giant cited as an example of a SaaS company likely to face major AI-driven cuts and customer attrition.
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Cited for its Optimus humanoid robot project, discussed as a potential 10–20 year horizon replacement for blue-collar physical labour.
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Anthropic's AI model, central to the episode as the engine behind OpenClaw agent setups and praised as the most 'street smart' AI model.
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Messaging platform used by Ben to operate his multi-agent OpenClaw system, with each AI employee assigned its own group chat.
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Chinese open-source AI model series that can run locally on a 32GB MacBook and matches Claude Sonnet on coding benchmarks.
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Block's peer-to-peer payment app contributing 55% of Block's gross profit, seen as resilient to AI disruption due to network effects.
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Satellite internet service cited as an enabler of location-independent work, reducing the need to live in cities for high-paying jobs.
This episode
Claims & Sources
Factual claims made this episode, and whether a source was named.
The CEO of Microsoft AI stated that most, if not all, white-collar tasks can be replaced by AI within 12 to 18 months.
Block's stock price rose approximately 30% following Jack Dorsey's announcement of mass AI-driven layoffs.
There are 33 million small to medium-sized businesses in the US that could be using AI but largely are not.
US plumber salaries rose from approximately $40,000 in the early 2000s to as high as $250,000 today.
Citrini Research argued that AI complements blue-collar jobs rather than replacing them, at least for the foreseeable future.
Cash App accounts for 55% of Block's gross profit.
Adobe's stock is down approximately 30% on a yearly basis due to AI disruption.
Atlassian, with $1.6 billion in annual revenue, has seen its stock fall 70% year-on-year.
Security sector stocks dropped 10% immediately after Claude announced it was offering security audit capabilities.
Qwen 3.5 matches Claude Sonnet on coding benchmarks and can run locally on a 32GB RAM MacBook.
A Bloomberg terminal costs approximately $30,000 per year and was vibe-coded using Perplexity Computer in a few prompts.
A lawyer using AI today can handle 10 to 20 clients where they previously could only manage one or two.
Physical blue-collar jobs like plumbing, electrician work, and carpentry are 10 to 20 years away from being replaceable by humanoid robots.
Jack Dorsey cut half of Block's workforce — not because the business was struggling, but because AI is more productive. The stock jumped 30%. The God Mode Pod crew unpacks what this signals: markets are now rewarding AI-first headcount cuts, white-collar jobs face a 12–18 month replacement window per Microsoft's AI CEO, and blue-collar trades like plumbing may be the safest bet. The episode also dives into Perplexity Computer, Qwen local models, Google's Imagen (Nana Banana 2), and Ben's jaw-dropping multi-agent OpenClaw system running his business via a virtual AI staff of ten.
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Look closer
The God Mode Pod crew discusses Jack Dorsey's mass layoffs at Block (stock up 30%), AI's impact on white-collar and blue-collar jobs, UBI economics, real estate implications, the Citrini Research bear case for 2028, Perplexity Computer, Qwen, Imagen (Nana Banana), and a deep dive into Ben's multi-agent OpenClaw setup powering their podcast production.
- OpenClaw
- A community term for running Claude (Anthropic's AI) as an autonomous agent or multi-agent system, typically via API, to handle complex tasks with minimal human intervention.
- VPS
- Virtual Private Server — a cloud-hosted virtual machine used here to run AI agents 24/7 without relying on a local computer.
- MRR
- Monthly Recurring Revenue — a standard SaaS metric for predictable monthly income from subscriptions.
- UGC
- User-Generated Content — here used to refer to creator-produced promotional video content managed through Ben's custom AI dashboard.
- Vibe coding
- A colloquial term for AI-assisted coding where a user describes what they want in natural language and the AI generates the code, requiring little to no manual programming.
- Agentic AI
- AI systems that can autonomously plan, take actions, use tools, and complete multi-step tasks with minimal human prompting.
- ZERP
- Zero Interest Rate Policy — the near-zero interest rate environment maintained by central banks that fuelled speculative tech hiring booms circa 2021.
- FUD
- Fear, Uncertainty, and Doubt — a term for negative sentiment or narratives spread about a technology, market, or asset.
- SaaS
- Software as a Service — cloud-hosted software sold on a subscription basis; discussed here as a business model threatened by AI-enabled self-built alternatives.
- CPM
- Cost Per Mille (thousand) — an advertising metric measuring cost per 1,000 impressions, used by Ben to evaluate his UGC creators.
- MCP
- Model Context Protocol — an integration standard allowing AI models to connect with external tools and services.
- Nana Banana (Imagen)
- Google's AI image generation model (referred to by the hosts as 'Nana Banana'), capable of high-fidelity photo and visual creation via the Gemini Flash infrastructure.
- Bench-maxing
- Gaming or over-optimising AI benchmark scores without genuine capability improvement, making a model look better on tests than in real-world use.
- Citrini Research
- A financial research publication whose viral 2028 bear-case scenario article, imagining AI-driven economic disruption, was discussed at length in the episode.
- UBI
- Universal Basic Income — a proposed policy of unconditional cash payments to all citizens, discussed here as a potential response to AI-driven mass unemployment.
- Hegemonic
- Relating to dominance or leadership over others; implicitly used in the episode's framing of US and Chinese AI model dominance.
- Optimus
- Tesla's humanoid robot project, cited as a future potential replacement for blue-collar workers like plumbers, but estimated to be 10–20 years away from practical deployment.
- OpenRouter
- A platform that provides a unified API to access multiple AI models, used by Ben to simulate and test model outputs.