J. D. Vance claims freeing AI from regulation is good for American workers and tech innovators

On Tuesday, Vice President JD Vance said that the support of the Trump administration for AI and technical innovations should benefit both populists and those investing and leading technology companies.
“I think there is too much fear that AI will easily replace jobs instead of increasing so many things we are doing now,” Vance said at the Andreessen Horowitz American Dynamism Summit In Washington, DC
Although Vance acknowledged that new technologies could lead to a relocation of certain jobs, as was the case with bank narrators when the ATM was invented, he said that history shows that innovation eventually helps to create more fascinating, higher -paid jobs.
“What I propose is that every group, our employees, the populists on the one hand, the tech optimists on the other, have failed by this government, not only the government of the last government, but the government in some respects in the past 40 years,” Vance said.
By not imposing important regulations on AI, the Trump administration promises to give the technical sector the freedom to innovate.
The vice -president also argued that “the international rearrangement of trade and tariff regime, as well as reduced immigration, would act as an obstacle to offshoring.
“Cheap labor is fundamentally a stool, and it’s a stool that brakes innovation,” said Vance. “We don’t want people to be looking for cheap labor.