![]() ‘I Co-Authored a Book with Chat GPT.’ Apple After Tim Cook. Plus. . . Arthur Brooks on how Catholics should react to Trump’s attacks on the pope. The former conservative Republican running as a Democrat. The moral inversion of anti-Zionism. And much more.
Transit Tech CTE High School in Brooklyn, New York, on March 27, 2026 (Alex S.K. Brown for The Free Press)
It’s Tuesday, April 21. This is The Front Page, your daily window into the world of The Free Press—and our take on the world at large. Today: Patrick McGee on Tim Cook’s legacy at Apple. Arthur Brooks on why American Catholics don’t have to choose between Trump and the pope. A study finds anti-Zionism distorts moral judgment. Can a former Republican lieutenant governor win as a Democrat? And much more. But first: Can you escape AI disruption—or should you embrace it? Around a year ago we published an essay about how the world was about to change—and what you should do about it. “AI Will Change What It Is to Be Human. Are We Ready?” asked the headline of the piece. In the opening line, Tyler Cowen and Avital Balwit—no AI doomers—posed another question: “Are we helping create the tools of our own obsolescence?” That question has grown only more urgent since last spring, with AI technology advancing at an eye-watering pace. Today, we bring you two stories about how AI is changing how we work—and two radically different approaches to the question on everyone’s mind: Will I survive the AI revolution? Up first, River Page visits a trade school to investigate the idea that as the AI “jobpocalypse” comes for white-collar professions like lawyers and accountants, people who work with their hands (think plumbers and electricians) will remain safe. But does the logic really hold, or is “learn a trade” the new “learn to code”—a meaningless slogan that is no match for the fearsome disruption already underway? Read River’s piece to find out. For another perspective on the disruptive power of this new technology, we turn to futurist Jamie Metzl. He’s just published a book about AI—with AI. And no, this is not a tale of a writer caught in an AI authorship scandal. In fact, it’s right there on the cover: “By Jamie Metzl and GPT-5.” Jamie argues that you don’t need to dismiss the risks of the AI revolution to harness its miraculous power. —Oliver Wiseman |