You can say it like that, and make it sound super evil ... but none of us our crying over the 99.9% of horse shit sweepers who lost their jobs when automobiles were invented.
That's both an incorrect statement and an invalid comparison.
First, people did not lose their horse-related jobs "when automobiles were invented". The transition from horse/oxen power to machine power took 150 years. Jobs and economies gradually adapted over generations as steam locomotion spread, and then again over decades as automobiles spread. Trains and cars didn't take over the world 3-5 years after their major breakthroughs. There were millions of square miles of Earth's land surface where no railroad tracks or roads went, well into the mid-20th century. Even in the wealthy USA, it wasn't until after World War II that one car per household became the default. In the 1940s in the USA South there were still plenty of rural sharecroppers without a personal automobile. Same goes for working class folks in dense metropolitan areas with streetcar systems and city planning that did not yet prioritize cars and parking over all other needs.
Second, the automobile did not eliminate the need for powered motion. It's payload wasn't to eliminate movement. Its payload was to upgrade the method humans used for moving things to a more powerful method of moving things. The same humans were still moving the same things for generations/decades, because those things still needed to be moved. The AI/algo/agents being proffered this year are not saying "We'll take the same humans and give them a more powerful method of producing the same things they have been producing". They're not replacing human-driven horses that cart veggies to market, with human-driven trucks that cart veggies to market. They are making it so the veggies hop off the vines and drive themselves to the market.
I can understand the temptation to say, "Look at history-- there have been several big scares about The End Of Labor, but we always discovered some new market for goods and services several billion people could labor to produce". But this seems akin to saying that since the temperature change from 10C degrees to 25C isn't that bad and was composed of 3 changes of 5C each, that therefore we can confidently assume this pattern will remain true and the change from 25C to 40C will be just as comfortable.
That assumption fails for the same reason the "buggy whip manufacturer" comparison fails -- it presumes that the nature of human beings plays no role in determining whether a result succeeds or fails. It overgeneralizes the wrong rule: "Human metabolism can easily adapt to changes of 15C" instead of "Human metabolism can fairly easily adapt to most temperatures between 10C and 25C without major intervention". In the same manner, your argument overgeneralizes "The average human cognition which could easily adapt from manual labor in the fields to manual labor in the factories, can just as easily adapt to manipulating nuanced verbal abstractions of statistical inference within logic frameworks which update every 3-6 months".
Thus, it is not sufficient to merely hand-wave and say "Past changes have been adapted, so future changes will always be adapted". You must actually enter the fray and argue why the consequences of this particular change is a member of the set containing the consequences of all those previous changes. Otherwise what you have is not an argument, but a belief. Induction is not a proof of reality. Induction is a description of what we have observed, and that if the previous conditions hold, then we have reason to expect our observed event to repeat. But the "if" is doing a ton of heavy lifting.