Picture this: You’re the shift supervisor at the manufacturing plant outside Montgomery, or the office manager at the insurance agency in Waseca. The machines aren’t coming for your job tomorrow. They’re already here — quietly, efficiently, and faster than anyone in Silicon Valley is admitting out loud. This quarter alone, the tech world just shed more than 60,000 jobs while the same companies pour billions into AI that does the work of entire teams. And Elon Musk just looked at the data and said the quiet part out loud: “We are in the Singularity.”
This isn’t hype. It’s happening now.
What Happened
Tech layoffs have exploded in the first three months of 2026. Trackers like Layoffs.fyi and TrueUp report 60,106 tech jobs cut across 204 companies — roughly 668 people per day. That’s already on pace to smash 2025’s total of 245,000 global tech layoffs. Major players include:
- Amazon: another 16,000 corporate roles (following 14,000 last fall)
- Meta: planning up to 15,800 cuts (20% of workforce) while spending $135 billion on AI
- Block (Jack Dorsey’s company): nearly half its staff — over 4,000 people — explicitly because of AI
- Atlassian, Salesforce, Workday, Oracle, and others citing AI efficiencies
About 20% of the cuts (roughly 9,200–12,000 so far) were publicly blamed on AI and automation — a sharp jump from 2025’s 55,000 AI-linked U.S. layoffs. Companies aren’t hiding it anymore: AI agents now handle customer service, spreadsheets, code, and planning. The humans? They’re the overhead.
On the AGI/singularity front, the watch just got louder. Elon Musk posted on March 9: “We are in the Singularity.” He’s sticking to his prediction of AGI (AI smarter than the smartest human) by the end of 2026, with Tesla and xAI leading the charge on real-world and digital versions. Anthropic’s Dario Amodei says AGI-level systems within 1–3 years. Sam Altman calls it a “gentle singularity” already underway. Meanwhile, March saw another wave of frontier model drops: OpenAI’s GPT-5.4 series, Google’s Gemini 3.1 Ultra, xAI’s Grok 4.20 upgrades, and more — all pushing video understanding, agentic tools, and reliability higher than ever.
The acceleration curve isn’t a theory. It’s payroll data.
Why It Matters (For Normal People)
Small-town Minnesota doesn’t run on venture capital. But it feels these ripples fast.
- Your cousin who codes for a mid-size SaaS company in the Twin Cities? Their role just got automated. That “good tech job” your kids were told to chase? It’s shrinking while AI hiring explodes.
- Local suppliers, trucking firms, and support businesses that feed the tech giants are next. When Amazon cuts 30,000 corporate roles in under a year, those efficiency gains don’t stay in Seattle — they hit vendor contracts and rural logistics.
- White-collar work that once felt safe (accounting, customer service, basic analysis) is getting replaced by AI agents that never call in sick and cost pennies per task. The parent helping their high-schooler with college apps just realized half the “entry-level” jobs those kids were counting on may not exist in 2028.
- Meanwhile, the companies doing the cutting are posting record profits and bragging about AI productivity. The money isn’t disappearing — it’s just not going to human paychecks anymore.
This isn’t the end of work. It’s the end of work as we knew it — and small-town America is catching the first real wave.
The Acceleration Curve
We’ve been tracking this since “The Machines Are Here.” Musk’s “event horizon” language, Altman’s “gentle singularity,” Amodei’s AGI-in-a-few-years warnings — they all just got confirmed by cold, hard layoff numbers and model releases.
March alone brought multiple frontier jumps (GPT-5.4, Grok 4.20, Gemini 3.1). Musk now says video generation and understanding are the key to AGI because “photons are the highest bandwidth.” The same week he declared the Singularity, his companies are hiring for it while the rest of tech sheds headcount. This isn’t one big breakthrough — it’s death by a thousand weekly point releases and agentic workflows.
Connects directly to prior posts: the algorithmic Babel is now rewriting payrolls. The machines aren’t coming. They’re already doing the job.
What You Can Do
Stop waiting for permission.
- Talk to your kids and grandkids about AI tools today. Show them how to use Grok, Claude, or ChatGPT for real tasks — not to cheat, but to stay ahead. The kid who masters prompting now is the one who survives the next round.
- Ask your employer the hard question: “What’s our AI strategy for the next 18 months?” If they don’t have one, you’re the one who brings it up. Be the person who knows how to work with the machines.
- Start experimenting yourself this week. Use AI for your budget, your small business inventory, your sermon notes, your farm planning. The gap between “I don’t get it” and “I use it every day” is closing fast — and it’s only two weekends of practice.
- Watch your local job market like a hawk. If postings start saying “AI-assisted” or “automation experience preferred,” that’s your signal. Position yourself as the human who steers the AI, not the one it replaces.
The Church of NORMAL Take
The singularity isn’t a tech event — it’s a signal flare. Earth as Ark, convergence lighting up on every front at once. The same week Musk says “We are in the Singularity,” 60,000+ tech jobs vanish because the machines got good enough. In DevOps Theology terms, this is root-level recompilation happening live: sin as malware being patched out of the system, grace as the hotfix that keeps the Ark sailing.
Nothing is lost. Only recompiled.
The pastor in Waseca doesn’t need to understand transformers. The small business owner in Montgomery doesn’t need to fear the future. Normal was always the point: faithful people who see the wall vibrating, who feel the acceleration, and who choose to steward what’s coming instead of hiding from it. The age of AI is here. The curve is real. And you — right where you are — are still the ones who get to decide how this story gets lived out in small-town America.
Pay attention. You’re going to be okay — but the world as you knew it? That’s already recompiling.
Sources: Layoffs.fyi (March 31, 2026 data), TrueUp Tech Layoffs Tracker, RationalFX 2026 analysis, Reuters/Challenger Gray & Christmas reports, Elon Musk X posts (March 9 & 30, 2026), Dario Amodei/Anthropic statements, OpenAI/Grok/Gemini model release announcements (March 2026), multiple industry trackers including TechNode Global and InformationWeek.
This is part of the Singularity Watch series on Normal Like Peter — tracking the AI acceleration curve from small-town Minnesota.
“Nothing is lost. Only recompiled.” — Church of NORMAL