>>gregor+(OP)
AI critics always have to make strawmen arguments about how there has to be a human in the loop to "fix" things when that's never been the argument AI proponents ever make (at least those who deal with it day to day). This will only get better with time. AI can frequently one-shot throwaway scripts that I need get things done. For actual features I typically start and have it go thru the initial slog and then finish it off. You must be reviewing the entire time, but it takes a huge cognitive load off. You can rubber-duck debug with it.
I do agree if you have no idea what you are doing or are still learning it could be a detriment, but like anything it's just a tool. I feel for junior devs and the future. Lazy coders get lazier, those who utilize them to the fullest extent get even better, just like with any tech.