Or would never enter a jet stream of 200kts over Japan on VNAV mode, or would never level off and only one thrust lever would come up, or would never start flashing the VNAV PATH on the FMA just to go back to VS and climb pass your level off altitude, or would never have a completely clean radar scope while having a 45,000 feet formation right smack on the center of the pacific route with nothing else around, etc, etc....!
A lot of speculation when something goes bad about the pilots, but nobody really dedicates time to quantify how much things we potentially stop from happening just for being there, according to some "doing nothing"
Thats because your flying a Boeing. Airbus thrust levers NEVER move on their own. Sorry, couldn't resist.
The fact that we flying around in a 75+ ton aluminum tube doing 80 percent the speed of sound at 7 miles above the surface of the earth is a miracle of technology in itself. The datalink/security issue is not minor, but it is solvable. It seems to me the hard part is already done.
I'll bet were down to 1 pilot in 10 years. None in 20-30. If you use last year to gauge the relative speed of technology then your already behind. The pace is exponential at this point. It took only 100 years from the Wright Flyer to the 787. It won't be next year but its not going to be "hundreds" either. Fast change is the norm now.
Flame Away!