The threshold has already been crossed. Most people just haven't noticed yet. Artificial General Intelligence is not a distant horizon. It is arriving in stages, right now, in the form of AI agents that reason, plan, and act autonomously — and the world is not ready. Not governments. Not businesses. Not workers. Not the institutions that took centuries to build. The AGI Threshold is the book for people who refuse to be surprised. Written by Lon Forehand — AI policy analyst with 24 years of Congressional affairs experience, NASA policy and budget veteran and founder of the AGI Coming Soon publication — this is not a technical manual or a utopian promise. It is a clear-eyed, urgent, and specific account of what is already happening, what is coming in the next eighteen months, and what every government, business, and worker must do before the window closes. At approximately 34,000 words across nine chapters, The AGI Threshold is a focused, direct read — substantive enough to make a complete argument, short enough to finish in a single weekend. What separates this book from the dozens of AI books published each month is its specificity. No vague warnings, no manufactured urgency, no predictions dressed up as certainty. Every claim is grounded in documented developments. Every recommendation names a specific actor, a specific mechanism, and a specific timeline. Forehand writes with the confidence of someone who has spent two decades at the intersection of technology, policy, and institutional power. The book does not begin with definitions. It begins with the documented reality: AI agents are no longer advising humans, they are acting for them. The displacement is not theoretical — it appears in Bureau of Labor Statistics data, in company earnings calls, in the specific language of layoff announcements. The regulation gap is visible in every committee hearing where legislators ask questions that reveal they do not understand what they are governing. The geopolitical stakes are not abstract — the infrastructure battle for AI computing capacity is the defining contest of this generation, and decisions made in the next twenty-four months will shape its outcome for decades. Chapter by chapter, Forehand builds a complete picture: the technical realities of where AI capability actually stands today beyond the hype cycle; the agent revolution eliminating entire categories of knowledge work before most workers have been told it is happening; the new economy of solopreneurs and AI-powered small enterprises displacing the traditional employment model; the genuine promise of AI democratization and the specific structural gaps preventing it from being fulfilled; the regulation gap between what governments know and what they are legislating; the security and trust problems with systems deployed before they are fully verified; and the geopolitical battle that will determine who controls the most consequential technology in history. Every chapter ends with specific, named actors, concrete mechanisms, and honest timelines. The reader finishes not just understanding what is happening — but knowing exactly what should happen next, by whom, and when. Who this book is for: entrepreneurs who want to move before their competitors understand what is happening; policy makers governing technology they do not yet understand; workers who feel the ground shifting; educators teaching students for a world that no longer exists; and anyone who has concluded that something fundamental is changing — and wants to understand it at the level where decisions get made. The AGI Threshold is the first book in the nine-volume AGI Coming Soon series.
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