Thursday, June 4, 2026

Everyone saw the AI backlash coming — fewer expected it to start with the generation raised on screens

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In May, the former chief executive of Google stood at a podium at the University of Arizona, looked out at the class of 2026, and told them artificial intelligence was about to remake the world the way the computer once did. The boos started almost at once.

Eric Schmidt kept talking, then stopped and answered them directly. “I know what many of you are feeling about that. I can hear you,” he said, before naming the mood under the noise: “There is a fear in your generation that the future has already been written, that the machines are coming, that the jobs are evaporating.”

He was not an outlier. At Middle Tennessee State University that same month, a record executive told the room that “AI is rewriting production as we sit here,” and got the same response.

I think it’s fair to say the assumption has been that the backlash against AI, whenever it came, would arrive from the usual quarter: the older, the cautious, the people who never trusted the internet either. Instead it is showing up early and loud, from the twenty-two-year-olds in caps and gowns. The generation handed a screen before it could read is the one heckling the sales pitch.

The people who grew up with it are the wariest

This is not just a graduation-season mood. A Gallup survey of Generation Z, Americans born between 1997 and 2012, found their feelings about AI souring fast. In a single year, the share who said they felt excited about it fell fourteen points, to 22%. Hopefulness dropped to 18%. Anger rose to 31%, and anxiety held steady at a striking 42%. The detail that stops you is that even the heaviest users, the ones reaching for these tools every day, grew less positive over the year, not more.

Schmidt named a fear, and the data says it is real and spreading among precisely the people you would expect to be most at ease. Familiarity, in this case, has not bred affection.

It is not that they cannot use it

The easy explanation, that young people fear a technology they do not understand, falls apart on contact with the numbers. About half of Gen Z, 51%, use generative AI at least weekly. This is the perhaps most fluent cohort alive, and the unease is coming from inside the house.

Among those already working, Gallup found that employed Gen Z are now more than three times as likely to say the risks of AI on the job outweigh the benefits as the reverse: 48% to 15%, with the risk number up from 37% a year earlier. They trust work done without AI (69%) far more than AI-assisted work (28%), and almost no one (3%) trusts work produced by AI alone. Eight in ten say it is likely that leaning on these tools will make it harder for them to learn down the line.

Read those together and the picture looks less like technophobia than a considered verdict. These are not people refusing to touch the thing. They touch it constantly, and they have decided that they do not fully trust what it does to their own thinking.

So what are they actually telling us?

I should be straight about where I sit. I use these tools most days and find them useful, and I think a fair amount of the wider panic is overcooked. But the thing I keep turning over is that the loudest objection is not coming from the people furthest from the technology. It is coming from some of the people closest to it. When that happens with anything else, a product, a job, a town, we tend to read it as a signal worth taking seriously, not a mood to wait out.

The reflex is to file it under Luddism and move on, and I think that gets it backwards. Fluency is exactly what lets you see the cost of a thing, not just its convenience. The students booing have probably used AI to write the essay, and the same survey finds that eight in ten of their generation expect these tools to make it harder for them to learn. They are not rejecting a future they cannot picture. They are objecting to one they can picture clearly, and asking for some say in how it arrives.

The executive who got booed in Tennessee had his answer ready. “It’s a tool, make it work for you,” he told them. The harder question is the one his answer skips over. What happens when the first generation fluent in a technology refuses to greet its arrival as good news? Maybe the booing fades into the usual noise that surrounds any large shift, and the rollout proceeds on schedule. Maybe it doesn’t. Either way, the people in those caps and gowns will be the ones living with the answer, and right now they are telling anyone who will listen that they do not think it has been settled yet. 

 

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