Sigh, one of the few major regrets I have when teaching class is that most healthcare professionals don't read beyond what's assigned, nor are they innately curious to why their world works the way it does.
"I am seeking to rescue the poor stockinger, the Luddite cropper, the "obsolete" hand-loom weaver, the "utopian" artisan, and even the deluded follower of Joanna Southcott, from the enormous condescension of posterity." (Thompson, The Making of the English Working Class)
Your complaints and what you cite have more than a 50 year history, and many of those exact statements link to Club of Rome Limits to Growth scenarios. Problem is that their computer models were intentionally designed to be polemical, but a group of people actually took it seriously and designed their population control around it. We know it today as One Child.
Amazon product ASIN B00QPHNV4E
And let's put it this way, policy limits to growth tend to work out in ways that the planners didn't expect.
The humorously depressing part is that those alarmist computer models were off by quite a bit:
1. The Green Revolution happened allowing for greater food supplies
2. The Consumer Revolution and standards of living naturally limited growth (unless you're unusually religious, it's unlikely that you will have more than three children with the replacement rate being 2.6ish).
Can we have unlimited growth on finite resources, absolutely not. But, nature finds a way to even out the carrying capacity score. Read
A Distant Mirror by Tuchman or
The Making of the English Working Class by Thompson. And if you are white and are a SAR or DAR, it's likely that one of the reasons why your ancestors made the voyage was to actually grow as the old country didn't have the resources to do so.
And as for the problems that my generation faces, well, they are no worse than any others, and most of them are the same problems generations before have faced. There are solutions, but they are not problematic enough for us to address them yet.
Amazon product ASIN 0691165629
But yeah, don't talk to me about projection models that go past 5 years, they're always for a political purpose that never works out in the way the modelers can account for.
As far as technology taking over jobs, the problem is as old as land enclosure and capitalist displacement of labor. Best way to avoid being displaced is to control capital yourself. "What do you know about producing something, and why aren't you producing more?" Those questions are the ones that we can all work on in this time of uncertainty. But I'm not going to buy predictions that don't have either causative evidence or have historical counterexamples for those concerns as they are as old as life.
But I fear Mei Fong's future in One Child, where the government creates and enforces an unsustainable policy portfolio for the optics. College education and homeownership being the latest bubbles, healthcare (worryingly for us) is another policy overreach. The controversial one making the rounds is that veterans benefits may fall into that category soon. Solutions to these problems show up when they need to actually be solved.