I am a part-time coder, in that I get paid for coding and some of my code is actually used in production. I don't use LLMs or any AI in my coding, whatsoever. I've never tried LLM or AI coding, and I never will, guaranteed. I hate AI.
I agree with you, 100%. I like typing out code by hand. I like referring to the Python docs and I like the feeling of slowly putting code together and figuring out the building blocks, one by one. In my mind, AI is about efficiency for the sake of efficiency, not for the sake of enjoyment, and I enjoy programming,
Furthermore, I think AI embodies the model of the human being as a narrowly-scoped tool who gets converted from creator into a replaceable component, whose only job is to provide conceptual input into design. Sound good at first ("computers do the boring stuff, humans do the creative stuff"), but, and it's a big but: as an artist too, I think it's absolutely true that the creative stuff can't be separated from the "boring" stuff, and when looked at properly, the "boring" stuff can actually become serene.
I know there's always the counterpoint: what about other automations? Well, I think there is a limit past which automations give diminishing returns and become counterproductive, and therefore we need to be aware of all automations, but AI is the first sort of automation that is categorically always past the point of diminishing returns, because it targets exactly the sort of cognitive features that we should be doing ourselves.
Most people here disagree with me, and frequently downvote me too on the topic of AI. But I'll say this: in a world where efficiency and productivity has become doctrine, most people have also been converted into only thinking about the advancement of the machine, and have lost the essence of soul to enjoy that which is beyond mere mental performance.
Sadly, people in the tecnhnical domain often find emotional satisfaction in new tools, and that is why anything beyond the technical is often derided by those in tech, much to their disadvantage.