Is this thing bad because every version of it so far sucks, or is it bad because it is inherently wrong?
(Or both. Both is quite possible.)
Consider surveillance systems: You can point to racial disparities and other biases, false positives, false negatives, etc.
All these defects may be true, but the people advocating for such systems will simply say “don't worry, we'll have better versions in time”. “The technology will get better.” “They're working on it.” All manner of hand-waves and rule-making attempts that either gloss over or attempt to deal with defects and misuses but do nothing about fundamental wrongness.
Some things are just fundamentally wrong. Mass surveillance is an example of that—mass surveillance is fundamentally wrong because it infringes on our fundamental human right to privacy.
If you can lay out a convincing case for why something is inherently wrong, and show how the latest shitshow being produced is an example, then there's no technological advancement or procedural enforcement that can stand against that. The thing is wrong, and it should be put in the bin and the bin thrown in the sea—there is nothing else for it.
Another way of looking at this is that “every version of this so far has sucked” is, at best, a “not now” argument, whereas “this thing is inherently wrong and making it more effective makes it worse, not better” is a “not ever” argument.
Being able to clearly argue on both fronts is an asset for convincing people to help you defeat bad things.