Nearly two-thirds of Americans say they're worried about artificial intelligence creeping into their daily lives, and the numbers confirm what working people already know: the technology is being forced on them whether they like it or not.

An Athena Insights poll released Tuesday shows that 28% of respondents are "very concerned" about AI's growing role in U.S. society and another 37% are "somewhat concerned." That's 65% worried, against just 24% who expressed any excitement. The poll, first reported by The Hill, surveyed 1,814 Americans from June 24-29 with a 3.4-point margin of error.

The stakes are plain. Roughly 70% of respondents said AI is now part of their lives whether they want it or not. Only 15% believe they have any power to shape how much AI enters their world. That's not adoption — that's imposition. And 70% said they're already having trouble telling what's actually real because of AI-generated content.

Meanwhile, the establishment press would rather chat about anything else. Fox News spent the week amplifying a comedian calling Trump the "White Obama" on Trevor Noah's podcast — a triviality that does nothing for the American worker staring down an algorithm that wants his job.

Because jobs are the real fight. By nearly 20 percentage points, poll respondents said the U.S. government isn't doing enough to address AI's impact on employment, children, and the environment. A separate Reuters/Ipsos poll from June 10 found that half of Americans worry AI could leave them or someone in their household jobless. CNBC reported in May that young professionals with college degrees are already struggling to find entry-level work as AI adoption accelerates.

Athena Insights Research Lead Colin Hyatt Bortner told The Hill the poll was designed as a "very neutral instrument" on the theory that negative impacts from AI "will then show up in the data, and then that will drive a policy response." He added that in a public policy fight over AI, having the public on your side helps you "figure out how you position yourself, how you argue."

Analysts previously told the Daily Caller News Foundation that AI tools cannot yet replace certain human skills outright — a cold comfort to anyone watching Big Tech pour billions into making that statement obsolete.

The pattern is familiar: Big Tech builds the tool, strips the citizen of choice, and then asks why everyone's upset. The media calls it progress. The poll numbers say otherwise.

The open question is whether Washington will listen to the 65% before the next round of layoffs — or after.