I've been trying to think back to where I was in my early 20s, convinced that I knew everything about everything and didn't need to listen to the adults in the room who had (as I saw it) already traded out their idealism for pragmatic economic egoism. I wish that I could more readily access that kind of idealism now but I also see that the pragmatism of my parent's generation has its merits too. But that's also why I don't see an "if" anymore when it comes to maximum AI cultural takeover. It's just a matter of "when".
The more us "old people" rail against AI, the more convinced the next generation of kids are that it is going to be their path forward, the way they force us out of a stagnant job market and start to make headway toward securing their future financial independence. Private equity wants to fund AI startups and this new generation of students seems fully bought in to the idea that their future will be built around their ability to manipulate AI for profit. It may all just be an echo chamber but an idea doesn't need to be real to have power, it just needs to have buy-in.
I don't know that I will still be alive when today's college students have their collective "cigarettes cause cancer" moment when it comes to AI and brain rot, but that seems inevitable too. So I guess there is some hope left for idealism -- even if we may be two or three generations away from the next big cultural correction.