Everyone should have the opportunity to build their own house
Only a generation ago, building your own house used to be quite common. Most families contained several people who were active in the construction industry or, at the very least, had been closely involved in building their own house. You helped your family members and friends with their house, and they returned the favor.
When millennials were growing up, they often got the advice to steer clear from any type of manual labor and to focus on getting a degree. This was very reasonable advice, given that manual labor is physically demanding and - at that moment in time - often paid equal or less than knowledge labor.
As a result, almost no one in my generation still knows how to build or repair physical objects (myself included). While most of us would be more than willing to spend the time and effort to build our own house, the reality is that we do not have the expertise and cannot rely on a network of family (or friends) who do, as almost all of them became knowledge workers. Unfortunately, knowledge working no longer means you earn a good living. It simply means that you have developed some extremely specific expertise which is rarely use-able outside of a very specific context (assuming it is not a bullshit job in the first place).
Building regulations are also becoming increasingly complex, often without a rational correlation to the actual benefits. Add some NIMBY and the idea of building your own house from scratch becomes an almost absurd proposition.
While I do not believe that Large Language Models will replace knowledge workers, I do hope that more people will pursue a career in manual labor. The dream of most knowledge workers became to possess their own house. For a large part of history, building your own house used to be an obvious thing that you did when you were young, together with friends and family. Regaining this appreciation for manual labor is something we can do to take control of our own future.