A bombshell report from the Interactive Advertising Bureau has revealed what everyday Americans already knew: younger generations are sick and tired of artificial intelligence being shoved down their throats by corporate elites who refuse to listen to their customers.

This shouldn't surprise anyone who's been paying attention. As social media user @AlignedGaming pointed out, "I think consumers have gotten wise to bad patterns (Modern audience agenda) and reject it. The good devs will find other jobs while the activists will also find some other 'modern audience' project to sink next."

The pattern is clear: corporate America keeps pushing woke technology and "modern audience" content that real Americans simply don't want. Whether it's AI-generated ads that feel soulless and manipulative, or overpriced products with artificial scarcity, consumers are voting with their wallets.

This rejection of AI advertising is part of a broader consumer revolt against corporate manipulation. As @JAY_ROCK_58 noted on social media, "A good way for consumers to hold out on a company's bad business is to reject their new product, overpriced + scarcity on a product is not attractive."

The disconnect isn't limited to advertising. From utility companies demanding massive rate hikes to tech giants pushing unwanted AI features, corporations across America are ignoring consumer preferences while doubling down on failed strategies that benefit executives at the expense of everyday families.

Under President Trump's second term, with Elon Musk leading the Department of Government Efficiency, this kind of corporate tone-deafness is finally being called out. The Trump administration's America First policies prioritize what actual Americans want, not what coastal elites think they should want.

The message from Generation Z and Millennials is crystal clear: stop treating us like lab rats for your artificial intelligence experiments. Will corporate America finally listen, or will they continue to hemorrhage customers while chasing the latest Silicon Valley fad?

Award-winning journalist covering breaking news, politics & culture for Next News Network.

Source: Next News Network