I'm only halfway into the automate everything camp. In most areas, technology has greatly increased productivity and efficiency, not eliminated the need for labor to the degree that LordBucket is saying. The result is the amount of work required to provide everyone in society their essentials is vastly reduced.
This should be a great thing, but the incentives provided by capitalism completely foil any potential benefits. People who own and manage businesses have every short-sighted reason to look at the situation and say "Great! I only need to employ 1/4 of the people for the same pay and keep several times the profit!"
Now 3/4 of the people who would once have been employed in that sector are not. So now we have one small portion of people taking on increased amounts of responsibility, and another portion of people who are forced into poverty. The only people who benefit are the wealthy. The capitalist mantra asserts that a rising tide lifts all boats, but less and less people can afford a fucking boat -- boat being representative of the ability to participate in the economy at all. If you don't have an income, you don't get to benefit from progress. You sink. And progress seems to be resulting in more and more people sinking. Pretty counter-intuitive, right?
Those who are freed from work should be able to put their time towards other kinds of productive pursuits. There are a lot of people around my age who have struggled with employment for years, and the majority of them are intelligent people with wonderful ideas they'd love to be able to pursue. If they were allowed the time and resources to dedicate to innovation, society would benefit immensely. But they can't. They are required to struggle day after day to make themselves marketable to someone wealthier, so they can be hired into a job that will support them.
Bullshit jobs, as I've mentioned before, are one consequence of this, due to immense public pressure to provide everyone with jobs, most of which end up revolving around abstract manipulation of the imaginary number game to mitigate its natural inclination towards fucking over the majority. Vast numbers of people who spend the majority of their lives doing completely pointless crap.
You know how I spent the last 7 years? My job was to pull up a commercial invoice for a shipment being imported into the country. I'd classify the goods being shipped according to the
Harmonized Tariff Schedule, which is a system whereby every material item imaginable is associated with a 10-digit number, because... well, after 7 fucking years I still don't really get the point. Then I'd identify the country of origin, commercial value, shipper, importer, and some potential other requirements having to do with government agencies (such as FCC forms). I'd enter that into a system which produced a nice little one page document so that a customs officer could glance at it and stamp the goods ok for import. Literally just copying information from one form into another all day every day, with a sprinkling of specialized knowledge about completely made up crap of zero tangible consequence, for the sole purpose of making another guy's job a tiny bit easier. That other guy's job being enforcement of taxation on imports, which has absolutely zero relevance outside of everyone's favorite imaginary number game. It was soul-crushing. And there are millions of people wasting away in jobs like this.
If we stopped making people do work like that and, against the wishes of wealthy business owners, divided up the remaining work that actually matters among everyone more equitably, there is zero reason we couldn't achieve a 10 hour work week with double the pay you currently get for putting in 40 hours + a much stronger safety net. Society would be much, much, much happier and more stable. Not only that, but people would be free to pursue their own ideas. Even if you believe that most people are lazy and will just jack off their extra 30 hours a week, you'd have to be the most bitterly cynical person on the planet to believe that there would be no minority who would do great things with the extra time and resources. There would be an immense acceleration of progress.
But it's never going to happen unless our culture decides to challenge the basic structure of capitalism. Those who have been bestowed by the economy with the means to facilitate these changes have every incentive to instead prevent them from occurring.