The CEO Trusted AI Over Her. Monday Morning Exposed Everything-Tep

Richard Sterling fired Ashley Bennett on a Friday afternoon because he believed artificial intelligence had made her department unnecessary.

He did it in a glass-walled office overlooking the gray industrial edge of Chicago, where the warehouses looked like they had been stamped out of steel and weather.

He did not look at her when he said the words.

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He looked at his own reflection.

The printer outside his office clicked through somebody else’s paperwork.

The coffee on the side table had burned down to a bitter smell.

Ashley sat across from him with her hands folded in her lap and watched him slide a manila folder across the desk like he was presenting a gift.

“Algorithmic logistics is a legacy cost, Ashley,” Richard said.

He adjusted his tie in the glass.

“I’m not paying people to watch screens when software can do it for free.”

Ashley looked at the folder.

She had known something like this might come eventually.

Richard had been saying the word AI for months the way other people said profit or miracle.

He said it in board meetings.

He said it in elevators.

He said it whenever a person with actual technical knowledge tried to explain risk.

To Richard, a system was not real unless it had a sleek demo, a vendor lunch, and a slide deck full of blue gradients.

Ashley’s department did not have any of that.

Her department had monitors, audit logs, renewal certificates, compliance alerts, and people who knew what it meant when a code went yellow at 2:13 a.m.

They were not flashy.

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