True, and single-use plastic wrappers are indeed a scourge.
But one thing is often omitted when ranting about "companies that profit from blowing everything up": They often produce stuff that we a) don't need and b) buy. Nobody needs new phones / computers every year, but they get produced. Almost nobody needs pickup trucks and SUVs, but the suburbs are full of the things. Nobody needs "fast fashion", but here we go.
It's true that international manufacturing companies cause a majority of CO2 pollution, but they produce stuff for everyone. If people bought less useless stuff, we'd be better off.
And many will likely lose their jobs - especially those who refuse to learn how to use it.
I get that, and it's certainly tragic for any individual who is affected. But that's how the graphic design industry has always worked. Get with the new tech or get left behind. Few people are hand-painting signs any more.
Call me obtuse, but were people upset when the first movie poster was created digitally instead of hand-painted / hand-pasted?
Who are the people who put together the ideas and concepts for this intro? Who created the prompts, decided if they were fitting, edited them afterwards etc. etc.? Are they not artists? Is AI generated imagery not just another tool in a visual artists toolkit?