Two equally terrifying paths for the AI-powered development era. Left path: let the robot write everything and you become the babysitter who writes tests and reviews code to verify it didn't just hallucinate a sorting algorithm that only works on Tuesdays. Right path: you do the actual thinking and coding while AI handles the "boring stuff" like tests and reviews—you know, the exact things that catch your mistakes before production explodes. Both paths lead to the same destination: trust issues. Either you're trusting AI to understand your business logic better than you do, or you're trusting it to catch the bugs in code it didn't write. It's like choosing between a self-driving car that you have to constantly watch, or driving yourself while the AI critiques your lane changes. Neither option sparks joy, but here we are, standing at the crossroads pretending one is obviously better than the other. Spoiler alert: the real third path is using AI as a glorified autocomplete and doing both the coding AND the testing yourself like it's 2019, but nobody wants to admit that yet.