That kind of brings us back to the original question which is, is modern industrial production the problem? Or something else such as the system driving it, capitalism? There are some who would argue that modern industry presupposes a kind of instrumental rationality that views everything as an object, including people, and is thus dehumanizing. Others might attribute it to the larger capitalist system.
I think industry is fine as long as it's kept within acceptable social limits and with adequate safeguards. There was a period in American capitalism when the car factory was seen as the basis for strong middle class livelihoods. But there are also capitalist forces that undermine those same safeguards in other parts of the world, which is why you get factories collapsing on people in places like Bangladesh.
Also when we talk about the deficiencies of modern industrial production we're really thinking of a specific time and place, the 20th century west. There are parts of Africa, Latin America and South Asia where the state is pretty much weak or absent and people are being forced by protection rackets, warlords, etc. to collect natural resources at gunpoint, often by hand or with the bare minimum of tools. Who or what do you blame that on?