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Last I looked, current commercial aircraft can do pretty much everything on their own but land.
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Looks like they can land these days too, though it's still the norm for the pilot to land.
https://executiveflyers.com/can-autopilot-land-a-plane/
I also recall that after that collision when a Swiss air traffic controller was trying to work two ATC positions some time back, it was clarified that for collision avoidance -- probably the most-critical task an air traffic controller deals with -- if a human air traffic controller tells the pilot to do one thing and the computer tells the pilot to do something else, you disregard the human and obey the computer, so in practice computers mostly do or can run the situation today.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2002_%C3%9Cberlingen_mid-air_collision
Basically, the Russian plane followed the human ATC instructions, and the DHL plane followed the TCAS computer's instructions and collided.
I agree. The reason I said what I said was that assumed that this taxi would not have a pilot in it. A lot of what planes do is automated but having a highly trained human pilot overseeing everything relieves me.