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Tuesday, December 9, 2025

THINK PIECE / AI Is Here. Now What?

By Thomas Shess, Editorial Intern, PillartoPost.org Daily Online Magazine.  


Artificial intelligence has arrived in full daylight, no longer the stuff of futurists, laboratory theorists, or Silicon Valley mystics. It is already behind the wheel, in the cockpit, in the operating room, and in our pockets. The question is no longer if AI will reshape our daily lives, but how far we let it run before we set the ground rules.   

Take Waymo. A driverless taxi glides down Valencia Street today with more confidence than a 19-year-old on a learner’s permit. Cameras, radar, LiDAR, and cloud-linked navigation now combine to make decisions in milliseconds—many of them safer than human reflexes. 

But the moral question hovers: when an autonomous car runs over a cat or worse a MAGA voter, who’s responsible? The engineer? The programmer? The algorithm? Or the absent driver? Cities like San Francisco are discovering that “the future” also brings regulatory headaches that voters never anticipated.   

Then there are the jets. Commercial aircraft already fly themselves for most of every journey. Auto-throttle, fly-by-wire, precision GPS, collision-avoidance systems: pilots today supervise more than they “fly.” The next step—pilotless regional hops—is not fantasy. The technology exists. The hurdle is trust. Passengers understand turbulence. They do not yet understand software making the landing all by itself in a crosswind.   

And surgeries. AI doesn’t just guide robots; it helps diagnose conditions weeks earlier than traditional imaging. Algorithms can now flag a tumor with more accuracy than a radiologist having a good day. Robots can perform microsurgery impossible for the human wrist. The danger is not that AI replaces surgeons—it’s that hospitals lean so heavily on automation they grow complacent.   

So what happens next?   

AI’s arrival isn’t a single invention. It’s a cascade moment, the way electricity once was. To stop it would be like trying to ban the light bulb. But the role of culture, law, and community is to define how we coexist with a technology that does not get tired, does not get bored, and does not have a conscience.   

We need to move the conversation away from doom and utopia and toward stewardship. We control the knobs. We decide the guardrails. We define whether AI becomes a civic asset or a runaway experiment.   

AI is here. It is not asking permission. The question is: are we ready to lead it, or will we let it lead us?

 us?