Madagascar's military leader thanks Gen Z protesters
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Refusing to let the coming wave of fanfare around December’s Africa Cup of Nations overshadow their demands, protesters in Morocco urged a boycott of soccer matches at the country’s new stadiums. On Saturday,
After several days of pause, Morocco’s Gen Z protesters returned to the streets Saturday for their first demonstration since King Mohammed VI addressed parliament amid weeks of unrest.
A leaderless collective called Gen Z 212 — named after Morocco’s dialing code — is the engine behind the protests. Members debate strategy on Discord, a chat app popular with gamers and teens. The core group has about 180,000 members, but spinoffs have also sprouted, organizing demonstrations in towns independently.
The grievances driving these movements are real. Each of these countries faces significant government corruption and high youth unemployment. Young people want better governance and are fed up
Gen Z has proven themselves to be vocal customers, according to the Medallia survey. The survey revealed Gen Z is twice as likely as Boomers to leave feedback on third-party review sites or social media and four times as likely to include complaints.
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A third of Gen Z have confided in AI chatbots over humans. Mental health experts are worried
The generation uses ChatGPT for therapy on everything from work stress to their deepest secrets, and 40% talk to AI for at least an hour every day.
Refusing to let the coming wave of fanfare around December's Africa Cup of Nations overshadow their demands, protesters in Morocco urged a boycott of soccer matches at the country's new stadiums. On Saturday,
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Gen Z protesters united by an anime pirate flag are challenging governments around the world
Madagascar's government is the second to be ousted in recent weeks as young people angered by economic hardship and perceived injustice demand change.