When society produces more highly-educated graduates than there are suitable jobs, a large group emerges whose high expectations are unmet. This "elite overproduction" creates a sense of grievance and entitlement, making them receptive to socialist ideas that promise to rectify perceived injustices.

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As AI automates entry-level white-collar jobs, a growing number of college graduates will face unemployment. This creates what historian Peter Turchin calls 'elite overproduction'—people educated for elite roles with no positions to fill. This disenfranchised group is a prime demographic for socialist movements.

The speaker argues universities are the primary source of societal decay. They indoctrinate the next generation of leaders with a "violently egalitarian" Marxist worldview that teaches them elitism while promoting an ideology synonymous with societal annihilation, creating a toxic and powerful combination.

In a 2020 email, Thiel argued that high student debt and unaffordable housing would leave millennials with no stake in the capitalist system, inevitably causing them to turn against it. This prediction highlights the economic roots of modern political shifts among younger generations.

When the economic system, particularly the housing market, makes it impossible for the youth to get ahead, it guarantees the rise of populism. Desperation leads them to vote for any promise of change, however destructive, such as socialist policies that ultimately collapse the economy.

Rising calls for socialist policies are not just about wealth disparity, but symptoms of three core failures: unaffordable housing, fear of healthcare-driven bankruptcy, and an education system misaligned with job outcomes. Solving these fundamental problems would alleviate the pressure for radical wealth redistribution far more effectively.

The growing appeal of socialism among the young is attributed to a "broken generational compact." As Peter Thiel predicted, when young people face crushing student debt and no path to homeownership, they lack a stake in the capitalist system and are more likely to turn against it, fueling movements like the one that elected a socialist mayor in NYC.

Pro-socialist views among millennials can be understood as a logical reaction to a "broken generational compact." When economic realities like crushing student debt and unaffordable housing prevent a generation from accumulating capital and gaining a stake in the system, they are naturally inclined to question or reject that system.

The speaker posits that the left's core demographic is "mal-educated" individuals—people with credentials but few economically useful skills. Unable to find their place, they become radicalized and use ideological purity spirals as a status game to bypass a merit-based system they resent.

The primary function of a college degree is to signal desirable employee traits—intelligence, work ethic, and compliance—rather than to impart useful skills. As more people get degrees, the signal weakens, forcing students into an expensive and wasteful 'credential race' for ever-higher qualifications to stand out.

The Gaokao produces millions of highly educated graduates, but China's slowing economy and the rise of AI cannot absorb them. This mismatch between educational output and job market capacity creates a potential powder keg of youth unemployment and social unrest.