I get it. Knowing good code and how to correctly build software that people actually want is experience that is consistently hampered by constantly having to learn yet another tech stack.
Using an LLM lets you quickly learn (or quickly avoid having to learn) yet another tech stack while you leverage your inherent software development knowledge.
This is it for me. I burned out on chasing the latest stack about 12 years into my career. I went into management and concerned myself with system design, product design, and process design. LLMs let me use that knowledge to build things I care about: features and products, without getting (too) bogged down in things I don't: super elegant code in the hot new framework that users will never see or pay for.
Using an LLM lets you quickly learn (or quickly avoid having to learn) yet another tech stack while you leverage your inherent software development knowledge.