Skilled At Work

Is AI being shoved down your throat at work? Here’s how to fight back.

Resistance to exploitative AI starts with building a movement.


In a medium-sized ad agency bathed in the glow of dashboards and KPIs, an AI engineer sits quietly while senior managers—few of whom have ever written a line of code—champion the latest generative AI tools as if they were silver bullets for every business challenge. The engineer knows better. They have built models that predict ad performance with precision, models grounded in data, accountability, and measurable outcomes. But now, amid the hype, they feel increasingly alienated—not by the technology itself, but by the uncritical, almost ritualistic adoption of AI that seems driven less by purpose and more by FOMO.

This engineer is not alone. Across tech, media, healthcare, and education, people are beginning to ask: *Who really benefits from AI?* And more pressingly: *At what cost?*  

The financial, human, and environmental toll of AI—especially generative AI—is rarely part of the boardroom pitch. Training a single large language model can emit as much carbon as five cars over their lifetimes. Water consumption at data centers is skyrocketing. Labor is being displaced without adequate safety nets. And in creative fields, artists, writers, and musicians watch as their life’s work is scraped, repackaged, and monetized without consent or compensation.  

Yet to voice these concerns in a marketing-adjacent workplace—where optimism is currency and skepticism is seen as obstruction—is to risk becoming a pariah. The engineer fears that speaking up might label them “difficult” or “out of touch,” jeopardizing not just their influence but their livelihood. This is the modern professional’s dilemma: stay silent and keep your paycheck, or speak your conscience and risk your position.

So, is it “worth it” to push back?  

The answer is not a binary yes or no—it is *how*.  

Individual dissent, however principled, is rarely enough to shift the momentum of an industry captivated by AI-as-magic. But collective action changes the equation. The key is not to go it alone, but to find your allies. There are almost certainly others in your company—designers uneasy about AI-generated visuals, account leads who’ve seen AI-driven campaigns backfire, junior analysts drowning in poorly implemented “smart” tools—who share your unease but feel powerless to act.  

This is where solidarity becomes strategy.  

History shows that meaningful pushback against harmful technological rollouts doesn’t come from lone whistleblowers—it comes from organized groups. The Writers Guild of America’s 2023 contract included groundbreaking protections against AI replacing human writers. National Nurses United has demanded a seat at the table when hospitals consider AI in patient care. And across the U.S., grassroots coalitions have successfully delayed or blocked over $64 billion in energy-intensive data center projects, forcing companies to reckon with the hidden costs of their AI ambitions.

You don’t need a union to start building this kind of resistance—but it helps. If organizing your workplace feels daunting, look outward. Groups like the **Algorithmic Justice League**, **Fight for the Future**, and **Stop Gen AI** offer community, resources, and moral support for those resisting AI’s unchecked expansion. Even local efforts—like town hall campaigns against new data centers—can be powerful entry points into broader movements.

Philosophers Michael Brownstein, Alex Madva, and Daniel Kelly remind us that social change is not linear. In complex systems—like workplaces, industries, or societies—small actions can trigger outsized effects. Like water heating toward its boiling point, change may seem imperceptible until it isn’t. At 99°C, nothing looks different. At 100°C, everything transforms.  

We don’t yet know the “boiling point” for responsible AI—but we’re closer than we think. Polls show that half of Americans are more concerned than excited about AI, and 73% support robust regulation. This isn’t fringe skepticism; it’s a sleeping majority waiting to be awakened.

So yes—you should fight. But not as a solo voice in the wilderness. Fight as part of a network. Fight with strategy, with solidarity, and with the understanding that your values are not liabilities but assets in building a more just technological future.

And if your current workplace cannot accommodate that vision? Then perhaps it’s not your job that needs toning down—but your environment that needs changing.  

After all, the most radical act in an age of blind faith may simply be to ask: *What if we don’t?*