You switch from global automation to US car manufacturing in the first paragraph without a even a line break, basically equating them.
The first graph you show is missing the corresponding table from the source which shows the exact opposite of what you have stated: the workforce had been steadily increasing until ~2019 and is in decline since then. Not massively but still it contradicts what you stated. Next you switch to Korea and the wage increase without aligning a corresponding price increase or adjust for inflation. Then you switch to the history on the industrial revolution. At that point I gave up because I know the point you are trying to make and I can see, you adjusted your samples to match that point.
The first graph you show is missing the corresponding table from the source which shows the exact opposite of what you have stated: the workforce had been steadily increasing until ~2019 and is in decline since then. Not massively but still it contradicts what you stated. Next you switch to Korea and the wage increase without aligning a corresponding price increase or adjust for inflation. Then you switch to the history on the industrial revolution. At that point I gave up because I know the point you are trying to make and I can see, you adjusted your samples to match that point.