The interesting thing about 20-somethings struggling to find full time work at nearly the levels millennials did during an actual recession is that...
...healthcare (and a mortgage) are the only two things that prevented most of us from participating in Occupy Wall Street.
The next time some mass protest like that occurs, the government can't rely on the fact that most of us have healthcare we need or, some of us, even mortgages.
Even back then, once the public support died down a bit they just had the NYPD bulldoze the whole thing. Since then the police have only gotten more brazenly violent against protests that are not in the establishment's interests.
Shit will get "wild" when instead of picket signs and bullhorns, people start bringing rifles and pipe bombs. Otherwise the outcome of any meaningful protest will be the same no matter how many people show up: an unforgiving police crackdown.
Ever since I saw those stupid fucking anti mask / anti vax assholes carrying guns (and getting what they wanted), I realized that guns at protests need to be commonplace. The police NEED to be legitimately fearful they will DIE if they FAFO.
The saying in organizer circles is "the boss is the best organizer".
This is a societal expansion of that idea. They continue to tighten the nuts on us, so we're squeezed with shitty jobs that don't pay a living wage, and facing general unaffordable prices for essential goods. As the working class progressively has less and less to lose, they will become more and more bold while organizing. The next widespread economic issue will see major worker and community organizing. You can bet the police gangs will be ready to beat on real union members, like the "good old days".
And we'll blast right back, Battle of Blair Mountain Part 2: General Boogaloo. Fucken tired of workers taking the burden of the entire world while rich people sip exotic beverages illegally from coerced underage anal cavities