China's unemployed Gen Z are proudly calling themselves 'rat people' and spending entire days in bed
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thanks for that
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Instead of even trying to chase jobs that seem out of reach, Gen Z is embracing living like a ratânot showering or leaving the house for days at a time.
The millennial era of âwork hard, play harderâ and âgirl bossingâ has given way to a new trend. In China, at least, Gen Zers are proudly calling themselves ârat peopleââtheyâre spending entire days procrastinating in bed, scrolling on their phones, snoozing and ordering take out.
I think it has something to do with "giving up" on the economy: if you have very low chances of landing a job anyways, why even try?
The article does not directly tell us how many people participate in this movement consciously. It does hint, however:
Today, over 4 million American Gen Zers remain jobless. In China, the government has said that as of February, 1 in 6 young people are unemployed.
I mean if I lived in China I'd give up too, or worse. Seems very sad to be there
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That's not the right answer. You'd think someone from lemmy.ml would know a bit more about this topic...
Not everyone from .ml is a tankie. I was trying to make a joke.
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Instead of even trying to chase jobs that seem out of reach, Gen Z is embracing living like a ratânot showering or leaving the house for days at a time.
The millennial era of âwork hard, play harderâ and âgirl bossingâ has given way to a new trend. In China, at least, Gen Zers are proudly calling themselves ârat peopleââtheyâre spending entire days procrastinating in bed, scrolling on their phones, snoozing and ordering take out.
I think it has something to do with "giving up" on the economy: if you have very low chances of landing a job anyways, why even try?
The article does not directly tell us how many people participate in this movement consciously. It does hint, however:
Today, over 4 million American Gen Zers remain jobless. In China, the government has said that as of February, 1 in 6 young people are unemployed.
Aren't rats notable for their hygiene and social skills? Seems like a poor comparison.
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how can you afford staying in bed scrolling on phone and ordering takeouts? rent, electric, phone, gas bills? is it because their boomer parents have one child and pay everything for them even when they grow up?
wondering this as well
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Instead of even trying to chase jobs that seem out of reach, Gen Z is embracing living like a ratânot showering or leaving the house for days at a time.
The millennial era of âwork hard, play harderâ and âgirl bossingâ has given way to a new trend. In China, at least, Gen Zers are proudly calling themselves ârat peopleââtheyâre spending entire days procrastinating in bed, scrolling on their phones, snoozing and ordering take out.
I think it has something to do with "giving up" on the economy: if you have very low chances of landing a job anyways, why even try?
The article does not directly tell us how many people participate in this movement consciously. It does hint, however:
Today, over 4 million American Gen Zers remain jobless. In China, the government has said that as of February, 1 in 6 young people are unemployed.
Wow! I'm totally a rat person! I do work but I hate doing anything else.
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how can you afford staying in bed scrolling on phone and ordering takeouts? rent, electric, phone, gas bills? is it because their boomer parents have one child and pay everything for them even when they grow up?
Bingo. Gen Z is still a young adult by definition so the parent's hope is they might land a job somehow. China is a fast moving economy and it's ultra competitive, some people would be inevitably left out.
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how can you afford staying in bed scrolling on phone and ordering takeouts? rent, electric, phone, gas bills? is it because their boomer parents have one child and pay everything for them even when they grow up?
My guy, gen Z's parents are gen X and millennials, not boomers
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Instead of even trying to chase jobs that seem out of reach, Gen Z is embracing living like a ratânot showering or leaving the house for days at a time.
The millennial era of âwork hard, play harderâ and âgirl bossingâ has given way to a new trend. In China, at least, Gen Zers are proudly calling themselves ârat peopleââtheyâre spending entire days procrastinating in bed, scrolling on their phones, snoozing and ordering take out.
I think it has something to do with "giving up" on the economy: if you have very low chances of landing a job anyways, why even try?
The article does not directly tell us how many people participate in this movement consciously. It does hint, however:
Today, over 4 million American Gen Zers remain jobless. In China, the government has said that as of February, 1 in 6 young people are unemployed.
I would too if I didn't have to work full time for affordable health care pouts
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My guy, gen Z's parents are gen X and millennials, not boomers
Right on the cusp myself but my parents are boomers and I'm not the only person my age that's true of
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Instead of even trying to chase jobs that seem out of reach, Gen Z is embracing living like a ratânot showering or leaving the house for days at a time.
The millennial era of âwork hard, play harderâ and âgirl bossingâ has given way to a new trend. In China, at least, Gen Zers are proudly calling themselves ârat peopleââtheyâre spending entire days procrastinating in bed, scrolling on their phones, snoozing and ordering take out.
I think it has something to do with "giving up" on the economy: if you have very low chances of landing a job anyways, why even try?
The article does not directly tell us how many people participate in this movement consciously. It does hint, however:
Today, over 4 million American Gen Zers remain jobless. In China, the government has said that as of February, 1 in 6 young people are unemployed.
Fuck ya. Go rat people go!
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Instead of even trying to chase jobs that seem out of reach, Gen Z is embracing living like a ratânot showering or leaving the house for days at a time.
The millennial era of âwork hard, play harderâ and âgirl bossingâ has given way to a new trend. In China, at least, Gen Zers are proudly calling themselves ârat peopleââtheyâre spending entire days procrastinating in bed, scrolling on their phones, snoozing and ordering take out.
I think it has something to do with "giving up" on the economy: if you have very low chances of landing a job anyways, why even try?
The article does not directly tell us how many people participate in this movement consciously. It does hint, however:
Today, over 4 million American Gen Zers remain jobless. In China, the government has said that as of February, 1 in 6 young people are unemployed.
wrote on last edited by [email protected]Most of us spend entire nights in bed, we should not judge
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Aren't rats notable for their hygiene and social skills? Seems like a poor comparison.
Are they? I thought they piss and shit poison and eat their babies for food. Are you thinking of mice?
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how can you afford staying in bed scrolling on phone and ordering takeouts? rent, electric, phone, gas bills? is it because their boomer parents have one child and pay everything for them even when they grow up?
wrote on last edited by [email protected]They are rats man. They find a way to survive just like....... well.... rats
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Are those 69 million all adults/working age already?
For full context it might also be useful to see the unemployment rates in other age groups in both countries.
There's a lot of factories over there dude
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Instead of even trying to chase jobs that seem out of reach, Gen Z is embracing living like a ratânot showering or leaving the house for days at a time.
The millennial era of âwork hard, play harderâ and âgirl bossingâ has given way to a new trend. In China, at least, Gen Zers are proudly calling themselves ârat peopleââtheyâre spending entire days procrastinating in bed, scrolling on their phones, snoozing and ordering take out.
I think it has something to do with "giving up" on the economy: if you have very low chances of landing a job anyways, why even try?
The article does not directly tell us how many people participate in this movement consciously. It does hint, however:
Today, over 4 million American Gen Zers remain jobless. In China, the government has said that as of February, 1 in 6 young people are unemployed.
The millennial era of âwork hard, play harderâ
I hate to be that guy that calls everything Orwellian, but this is NOT how Fortune was describing Millenials 15 years ago
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Congrats to the Wikipedia contributor who managed to get âshitposterâ into a sentence without it being removed
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Instead of even trying to chase jobs that seem out of reach, Gen Z is embracing living like a ratânot showering or leaving the house for days at a time.
The millennial era of âwork hard, play harderâ and âgirl bossingâ has given way to a new trend. In China, at least, Gen Zers are proudly calling themselves ârat peopleââtheyâre spending entire days procrastinating in bed, scrolling on their phones, snoozing and ordering take out.
I think it has something to do with "giving up" on the economy: if you have very low chances of landing a job anyways, why even try?
The article does not directly tell us how many people participate in this movement consciously. It does hint, however:
Today, over 4 million American Gen Zers remain jobless. In China, the government has said that as of February, 1 in 6 young people are unemployed.
A sudden seemingly coordinated wave of "China is horrible" stories, just as the courts start striking down Trump's 145% tariffs.
Crazy coincidental.
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Not everyone from .ml is a tankie. I was trying to make a joke.
wrote on last edited by [email protected]Certain people are very reflexively against the idea that someone in a foreign country might have a baseline quality of life that's higher than their own.
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Instead of even trying to chase jobs that seem out of reach, Gen Z is embracing living like a ratânot showering or leaving the house for days at a time.
The millennial era of âwork hard, play harderâ and âgirl bossingâ has given way to a new trend. In China, at least, Gen Zers are proudly calling themselves ârat peopleââtheyâre spending entire days procrastinating in bed, scrolling on their phones, snoozing and ordering take out.
I think it has something to do with "giving up" on the economy: if you have very low chances of landing a job anyways, why even try?
The article does not directly tell us how many people participate in this movement consciously. It does hint, however:
Today, over 4 million American Gen Zers remain jobless. In China, the government has said that as of February, 1 in 6 young people are unemployed.
Thatâs just called depression. Iâve been experiencing that for years