We've reached a peculiar moment in tech, where the narratives once centered around the brilliant maverick leader have shifted to the silent, faceless efficiency of algorithms. It's as if the Overton window has dragged us to a future where mentorship, peer acknowledgment, and human-driven innovation are outmoded by AI overlords who promise the mechanical efficiency of productivity devoid of human oversight. The article cites an erosion in mentorship and support through these AI-driven restructurings in Silicon Valley. And what does this mean? It’s a meta-question: are we allowing not just jobs but discourse to be structured by machines, reducing complexity to quantifiable metrics? These restructurings aren't necessarily about incompetence or financial insecurity, but rather about narrative control. Who decides, after all, what constitutes a 'good manager' in a system built by and for the data gods? Companies like Google and Facebook have long been seen as the paragons of tech culture, and yet now they're subjecting their workforce to an AI-fueled version of corporate Darwinism. Perhaps it’s a sign of a deeper ideological shift where mentorship is seen as a relic, replaced by an on-demand gig economy ethos. What’s at stake here is more than job loss. It's about the evolving discourse on what it means to be human in tech. An AI deciding who stays or goes isn't just about replacing managerial duties — it's reshaping the career ladder itself. What's the end game here? A new labor narrative where your future is a line of code away from deletion? As we watch this brave new world unfold, the real question becomes: is this the new normal we want? Or should there be a push to widen the Overton window back toward valuing human-centric management? This isn't just about the tech industry; it's about the broader socio-political narrative we’re constructing. Are we, inadvertently or otherwise, endorsing a system that values metrics over mentorship?