Friday, July 3, 2026
What industries will disappear completely in the next 20 years?
Very few industries will disappear completely in the next 20 years. What usually disappears is the old business model, not the entire human need behind it.
For example, people will still need transport, banking, education, entertainment, news, and security. But the companies built around manual, repetitive, paper-based, or middleman work may collapse or become tiny.
The most likely to disappear or become almost unrecognizable are:
Traditional data-entry outsourcing
AI will read, classify, summarize, and enter documents faster than humans. Data-entry clerks are already listed among fast-declining roles by the World Economic Forum’s Future of Jobs research.Basic call-center support
Simple customer service, billing questions, appointment booking, refunds, and troubleshooting will be handled mostly by AI voice agents and chatbots. Human agents will remain for complex, emotional, legal, or high-value cases.Bank teller and routine branch banking
Mobile banking, digital wallets, AI assistants, and automated fraud systems will keep reducing the need for physical bank counters. WEF also identifies bank tellers among fast-declining roles.Cashier-heavy retail
Self-checkout, cashierless stores, online delivery, computer vision, and digital payments will reduce many cashier jobs. Retail will not disappear, but the traditional cashier lane may.Postal clerks and paper-mail processing
Paper bills, letters, government forms, and physical documents will keep declining as services move digital. Package logistics will grow, but traditional clerical postal work may shrink sharply.Print newspapers and print advertising
Journalism will not disappear, but daily printed newspapers, classified ads, and paper-first media businesses may become niche products for older audiences, archives, or luxury reading.Physical media rental and disc-based entertainment
DVD rental, CD sales, and disc-based game distribution are already mostly replaced by streaming, cloud libraries, and downloads. In 20 years, they may survive only as collector markets.Fuel-station models built only around petrol/diesel
As electric vehicles grow, many fuel stations will either convert into charging, food, logistics, and convenience hubs, or disappear. The European Union’s 2035 combustion-engine target shows how policy and EV adoption are pushing this transition, even if timelines vary by country.Low-skill translation and transcription services
AI translation, captioning, dubbing, and voice cloning will replace basic translation/transcription work. Human experts will still be needed for law, diplomacy, literature, culture, religion, intelligence, and sensitive negotiations.Traditional travel ticketing agencies
AI trip planners, booking platforms, digital visas, and direct airline/hotel systems will weaken basic ticket-selling agencies. Luxury, corporate, religious, medical, and complex travel planning may survive.
The strongest pattern is this: industries based on repetition, paperwork, middleman access, simple prediction, or routine communication are most exposed. McKinsey estimates that activities equal to up to 30% of current U.S. work hours could be automated by 2030, accelerated by generative AI, while WEF expects major decline in clerical, cashier, ticketing, data-entry, and administrative roles
The deeper truth: technology may not destroy “work” itself. It will destroy many forms of work that exist only because humans were once the cheapest way to process information, move paper, answer basic questions, or stand between people and services.
Can citizens distinguish between information, propaganda, and activism?
Citizens can distinguish between information, propaganda, and activism, but it is becoming harder because all three often look similar online.
Information tries to explain what happened, using evidence, context, and multiple perspectives.
Propaganda tries to control what people believe, often by using fear, repetition, emotional slogans, selective facts, or enemy images.
Activism tries to persuade people to support a cause, campaign, movement, or policy. It may use facts, emotion, moral arguments, and mobilization.
The challenge is that activism can contain real information, propaganda can use real facts selectively, and media content can mix all three.
Can citizens still separate truth from persuasion when modern media blends information, propaganda, activism, and entertainment into the same message?
Key angles:
Source: Who created the message, and what do they want?
Evidence: Are claims supported by facts or only emotion?
Balance: Are opposing views fairly represented or demonized?
Language: Is the message informing, persuading, or manipulating?
Repetition: Is the same slogan being pushed again and again?
Action: Is the audience being asked to think, feel, hate, fear, donate, vote, protest, or attack?
Balanced conclusion: citizens can tell the difference, but only with media literacy, patience, and skepticism. In today’s media environment, the most powerful skill is not just consuming information, but asking: Who benefits if I believe this?
Thursday, July 2, 2026
Did you know that..
Did you know that...
Jedwabne, Poland, 1941
In Jedwabne, Polish residents participated in the murder of hundreds of Jewish neighbors under German occupation. The case remains one of the most painful examples of local participation in anti-Jewish violence.
Kovno, Lithuania, 1941
In Kovno, German occupiers were assisted by parts of the local non-Jewish population. Thousands of Jews were massacred, forced into a ghetto, and later murdered or deported.
The good, bad and ugly of data centers
The Ugly
The ugliest part is the feeling of unfairness. People see private tech giants getting tax breaks while local residents may face higher utility costs, water pressure, noise, and environmental risk.
Another ugly issue is secrecy. Some projects are negotiated quietly before residents fully understand how much power and water the facility will need.
There is also a climate concern. If data centers require gas plants, coal plants, or delayed fossil-fuel shutdowns, communities feel that AI growth is slowing clean-energy progress.
And finally, there is a trust problem. Many people believe Big Tech is asking society to pay the hidden cost of AI while the profits go to corporations.
Why People Are Rejecting Them Now
The rejection is growing because AI has changed the scale. Data centers are no longer just normal internet infrastructure. AI training and AI services require massive computing power, and the International Energy Agency reported that data-center electricity use surged in 2025 amid the AI boom.
Public opinion is also turning more cautious. A 2026 Pew survey found Americans are more negative than positive about data centers’ impact on the environment, home energy costs, and quality of life nearby, though they are more positive about tax revenue and economic effects.
So the issue is not simply “data centers are bad.” The real question is: who benefits, who pays, and who gets a say before they are built?
A fair model would require transparent water and electricity plans, no hidden tax giveaways, community benefits, renewable power commitments, noise controls, local hiring, and real public consultation before approval.
Did you know that....
Did you know that....
Did you know that...
The bad side of Nigerian politics is corruption. The ugly side is how corruption becomes normal.
Religion becomes dangerous when citizens stop asking questions and start defending leaders blindly.
No tribe, religion, or region should be used as a shield for crime, terrorism, or political failure.
A true leader protects farmers, traders, students, worshippers, travelers, and children—not just political allies.
Nigeria needs leaders who fear history more than elections.
When insecurity becomes political, victims become statistics and criminals become negotiations.
The good side of Nigeria is its people. The bad side is its leadership. The ugly side is how long the people have endured both.
A nation divided by religion and ethnicity is easier to loot, easier to control, and harder to heal.
Nigeria will not be saved by slogans. It will be saved by justice, accountability, courage, and citizens who refuse to be manipulated.
Nigeria’s problem is not one religion, one tribe, or one region. Nigeria’s problem is a political culture that often uses religion, ethnicity, poverty, and insecurity as tools of control.
We must condemn extremism without condemning innocent communities. We must criticize corrupt politicians without surrendering hope in leadership. And we must remember: a nation cannot heal when truth is sacrificed for loyalty.
Nigeria needs justice, not excuses. Leadership, not luxury. Unity, not manipulation.
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