The Graduation Paradox
As graduation season peaks in 2026, there is a strange tension in the air. For parents sitting in high school bleachers or university stadiums, we expect the familiar, comforting scripts: "the future is yours," "embrace change," and "be bold." But this year, those bromides are hitting a wall.
Across the country, we are witnessing a recurring, jarring scene: commencement speakers—often leaders in tech or industry—being met with jeers and boos the moment they mention Artificial Intelligence. From the University of Arizona to the University of Central Florida, graduates aren’t just disagreeing; they are reacting with visceral frustration. They aren’t "anti-tech"—they are worried that the promise of the future is being framed as their own obsolescence. They hear "the next Industrial Revolution" and hear, "your entry-level job is gone."
It is a painful disconnect. We are at a moment where leaders are championing efficiency while the next generation is feeling a profound sense of precariousness.
But if you want to see how a true leader handles the "future of work," look back to 2019, when Robert F. Smith took the stage at Morehouse College.
Smith, a titan of the investment world, didn't stand at that podium to tell the graduating class to "embrace the disruption." He didn't lecture them on the shifting labor market or the march of technology. Instead, he looked at 400 young men staring down the crushing weight of student debt—a financial barrier that keeps people from taking risks, starting businesses, or building wealth.
He made an announcement that remains one of the most powerful displays of "capital as a catalyst" in recent history: he pledged to pay off the entire graduating class's student loans.
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The Scale: The final total came to $34 million. Crucially, the gift did not just cover the students' loans; Smith extended it to include the Parent PLUS loans that families had taken out to fund their children's education.
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The Mechanism: The funds were channeled through a newly created "Student Success Program" at Morehouse, which turned a one-time gift into a systemic intervention.
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The Impact: By wiping out both student and parent debt, Smith created a "bullet-proof" financial foundation, ensuring that graduates were not just unencumbered by debt, but that their households were freed from the long-term interest-servicing trap that typically prevents wealth accumulation for decades.
It was a $34 million investment in human agency. Smith understood something that the "AI-optimists" currently getting booed at commencements are missing: You cannot ask someone to build the future if they are still shackled to the past.
For those of us in the world of finance, the lesson is clear. We spend our careers obsessed with the next technology, the next valuation, and the next margin expansion. But the most effective leverage isn't just on the balance sheet—it’s in the ability to identify where you can clear the path for others.
As I watch my daughter walk across that stage this year, I’m not hoping she just "adapts" to the machines. I’m hoping she finds, or becomes, the kind of leader who understands that true power isn't measured by how much you can automate, but by how many people you can empower to take the next step.
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