The World as It Is, The World as It Could Be
Every week, the headlines deliver another crisis, another injustice, another system failing the people it was meant to serve. But beneath the noise lies a pattern - and an opportunity.
This section cuts through the cycle of reaction to examine current events through a Modern Mutualist lens: How did we get here? Who holds power, and who bears the risk? Where do markets serve communities, and where do they extract from them?
We don’t stop at critique. Each reflection maps a path forward rooted in mutual aid, cooperative ownership, and the radical ideas that freedom and solidarity aren’t opposites - they’re prerequisites.
The analysis runs deep. The vision runs deeper.
The Extraction Generation: Why Gen Z Women Must Build Modern Mutualism or Perish
You were promised that college was the ticket. You were told that hard work built wealth. You were assured that innovation would lift all boats.
They lied.
And if you're a woman - especially a woman of color, a mother, a caregiver, a gig worker - the lies were compounded by an economic system that has always treated your labor as invisible, your contribution as unskilled, your body as infrastructure to be used.
Look at the numbers. Recent college graduates now face a 5.8% unemployment rate - the exact same as Americans who never finished high school . But here's what the aggregate data hides: women's unemployment is rising faster than men's, and the jobs that remain are increasingly concentrated in low-wage, precarious sectors. The wage premium for your degree still exists, but the job security premium has evaporated. In 2010, a college degree meant half the unemployment risk of a high school diploma. Today? That gap has collapsed to nearly nothing . You are the most educated generation of women in human history, and you are competing for barista positions with algorithms and retirees.