Do you think this is true?
I've been thinking about this a lot about AI. And I thought this group would be a great place to ask your insights about this important topic.
This quote has been sitting in my head for a long time:🤔
🔶 “AI can be the great equalizer for those who learn it early… and the great divider for those who wait too long.”
I keep thinking about what AI makes accessible now.
Research.
Strategy.
Analysis.
Writing support.
Business ideas.
Learning plans.
Decision support.
Context.
Connection.
Things that used to be available mostly to people with money, staff, elite education, or powerful networks. And now?
Some of those tools are available for free.
Even more are available for around $20/month.
I don’t say that lightly.
I was born and raised in the Philippines, so I know $20 can be a lot of money when converted into pesos.
But I also know what it means to grow up with limited access.
When I was in high school, I almost had to drop out because my parents could no longer afford tuition.
I was able to stay because my school gave me a scholarship.
Not everyone gets that chance.
That is why AI feels so personal to me. 💞
Because now, a person who does not have access to elite education can ask AI:
💚 “Help me understand what a strong high school education would include. Map it out for me and teach me step by step.”
A mom building a business can ask:
💚 “Help me think like a strategist, simplify my offer, and create a plan I can actually use.”
Someone without a network can ask:
💚 “Help me prepare for this conversation, understand this industry, and know what questions to ask.”
Is AI perfect?
No.
It still makes mistakes.
It still requires judgment.
It still requires human oversight, especially in areas like law, medicine, finance, education, and business strategy.
But access has changed.
And that matters.
✅ For people who are willing to learn AI, it can shrink gaps in education, opportunity, time, money, and support.
☠️ For people who dismiss it, fear it, or keep using it like it’s still 2023, the gap may grow wider.
That is the part I keep thinking about.
Because the divide may not just be between rich and poor.
Or educated and uneducated.
Or connected and disconnected.
The next major divide may be between people who know how to use AI well...
and people who choose not to learn.
👉 There is no judgment in that.
Just an invitation to pay attention.
There's no right or wrong answer. I'm simply starting a thought process.
I appreciate you. 🙏
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Katherine Lizardo
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Do you think this is true?
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