Gen Z's not lazy — they're just refusing to put up with the toxic work culture that Boomers created
of any generation. As Thomas told me, a union makes it clear that"this bigotry shit is just meant to divide us so that the employer class can continue making as much profit as they want to." He added:"I'm not going to stop fighting anytime soon."
Every new generation forges its own relationship with the powers that be, and Gen Z has made it quite clear which side it's on. As a loudly pro-worker, pro-union cohort, it's saying no to exploitation and standing up against corporations that want to grind them down the same way they did with these young workers' parents and grandparents.
Joshi is the executive director of Gen-Z for Change, a youth-led nonprofit that works with a network of 5,000 online creators and activists to promote"civil discourse and political action" around issues like the climate crisis, reproductive rights, voting, and workers' rights. The organization has also been taking on corporations trying to screw over their workers.
"We're using creative tactics that we've learned from growing up in the digital age, from social media to online scab campaigns," Joshi said. TikTok, in particular, has proved
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