> It, never has, in fact the opposite is true. Every type of automation has expanded the economic output so much that it created massive amounts of labor demand, …
This seems to be true, but there’s a second issue at work here, which that automation and progress in general can _disrupt_ the labor market. Sure there’s a net gain in labor demand, but there are people involved who are more than just “resources” who can easily be redeployed.
Progress is what built and then killed (injured?) cities and towns like, in the US, Detroit, or Gary, or Pittsburgh.
We want to promote progress and automation while at the same time protecting people who are inadvertently over-exposed to the downside. (Generally less educated people or people with less agency).