A Nobel Prize winning physicist says Elon Musk and Bill Gates are right about the future, with far more free time but fewer traditional jobs.

On a grey Tuesday morning in Stockholm, in a quiet office lined with chalkboards, a Nobel Prize–winning physicist closes his laptop and sighs. He has just finished reading an interview with Elon Musk and a letter by Bill Gates, both sketching a future where artificial intelligence does most of the work humans do today. Outside, cyclists rush to their jobs, coffee in hand, inboxes waiting. Inside, the physicist is staring at a very different picture of “work”.

No more commutes. No more “what do you do?” small talk. Maybe no more jobs at all.

He smiles and says something that sounds both exciting and slightly terrifying.

We will have more free time than any generation before us.

We just might not have a place to clock in.

#WhoIsNextFedChair #TrumpTariffsOnEurope #GoldSilverAtRecordHighs #ElonMuskTalks #WriteToEarnUpgrade

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