Facing the AI Job Crunch, Gen Z is Greeting the Revolution with Boos
The AI revolution has arrived, but rather than applause, it is being met with a chorus of boos—especially from the young digital natives whose livelihoods are most at stake.
As artificial intelligence reshapes global industries and tools like ChatGPT, Claude, and Gemini become household names, a sense of dread is deepening among the newest entrants to the workforce. Fearful of AI's impact on job security and daily life, young professionals are pushing back against the tech industry's optimistic vision of the future.
That pushback was on full display this week during former Google CEO Eric Schmidt’s commencement speech at the University of Arizona. Schmidt warned graduates that AI’s impact would be "larger, faster, and more consequential" than any previous technological shift.
"It will touch every profession, every classroom, every hospital, every laboratory, every person, and every relationship you have," Schmidt said. As he addressed their anxieties about an uncertain future, boos rang out from the crowd. While Schmidt acknowledged that the younger generation's fears were "rational," he echoed the stance of current tech executives: the disruption is inevitable, and society must adapt.
The students' fears are grounded in a harsh economic reality. On Tuesday, Standard Chartered announced it would cut over 7,000 jobs, explicitly stating it would replace "lower-value human capital" with AI. The banking giant is not an outlier. Meta is laying off 10% of its global workforce starting this month—even as it installs tracking software on U.S. employees' computers to train its AI models. Amazon has axed roughly 30,000 corporate jobs in recent months to push AI and efficiency, and in February, fintech firm Block laid off nearly half its staff. A softening hiring market, further strained by the ongoing Iran war, is only compounding the crisis.
This discomfort is reflected in the data. An April report from Gallup revealed a sharp decline in how Generation Z—those born between 1997 and 2012—views AI. Over the past year, the number of Gen Z respondents who feel anxious or angry about AI has risen, while those feeling hopeful or excited have plummeted.
Nearly half of those surveyed said the risks of AI outweigh the benefits, compared to a mere 15% who view it as a net positive—a significantly bleaker outlook than just a year prior. While most young adults recognize the need to be AI-savvy, they also report that the technology hinders deeper learning and creativity. "Negative emotions have intensified over the past year," the Gallup authors wrote, noting that AI usage among the demographic is beginning to plateau. However, the data did reveal one caveat: positive views of AI increased among heavy users, and decreased among those who used it less.
Schmidt’s frosty reception is part of a growing trend of public hostility toward tech elites. On May 8, real estate executive Gloria Caulfield was similarly heckled during her commencement speech at the University of Central Florida.
"The rise of artificial intelligence is the next industrial revolution," Caulfield said, only to be met with loud boos that caught her off guard. "What happened? OK, I struck a chord... Only a few years ago, AI was not a factor in our lives." At her acknowledgment of the tension, the room burst into cheers.
As corporate leaders rush to embrace AI, the resistance is spreading far beyond college campuses—from Chinese courts and South Korean carmaker unions to writers in Hollywood and India's film industry. But for a generation stepping into a workforce being hollowed out by automation, the message is clear: the AI revolution may be inevitable, but they refuse to cheer for it.
