I suspect there's a strong invisible ideological undercurrent pushing a lot of this. When I was younger and enthusiastic about things like a universal basic income, I would often follow the latest murmurings, always ready to let my hype (and hyperbole) meter go to 11. I remember when I saw the first news about some drone delivering a pizza (in New Zealand?) I immediately jumped to it foretelling the imminent end of all delivery jobs, with broad customer service not especially far behind. There's even the fully automated Henn-na hotel in Japan, I mean omg!
In my naivete, the idea I had is that if the jobs disappeared en masse then a social solution to the economy would be forced to be enacted. So I was essentially hoping to see the destruction of normalcy and employment in any new technology. I would expect that view is not uncommon given the direction of contemporary education. It feels analogous to cows hoping for the end of beef/milk harvesting. My beleaguered bovine buddies, what awaits you there is something rather different than cowtopia.