I agree with most of TFA but not this:
> This means cheaters will plateau at whatever level the AI can provide
From my experience, the skill of using AI effectively is of treating the AI with a "growth mindset" rather than a "fixed" one. What I do is that I roleplay as the AI's manager, giving it a task, and as long as I know enough to tell whether its output is "good enough", I can lend it some of my metagcognition via prompting to get it to continue working through obstacles until I'm happy with the result.
There are diminishing returns of course, but I found that I can get significantly better quality output than what it gave me initially without having to learn the "how" of the skill myself (i.e. I'm still "cheating"), and only focusing my learning on the boundary of what is hard about the task. By doing this, I feel that over time I become a better manager in that domain, without having to spend the amount of effort to become a practitioner myself.
I wouldn’t classify what you’re doing as “cheating”!
How do you know it’s significantly better quality if you don’t know any of the “how”? The quality increase seems relative to the garbage you start with. I guess as long as you impress yourself with the result it doesn’t matter if it’s not actually higher quality.