Youth-led initiatives further debunk the “lost generation” myth. From AgriBot’s AI-driven farming solutions to Green Warriors’ climate campaigns, young Pakistanis are tackling food security, environmental degradation, and digital divides head-on. UNESCO’s International Youth Day 2025 highlighted local efforts in cultural preservation and sustainable development, while the Asia-Pacific Global Youth Development Awards recognized Pakistani projects in climate action and tech innovation. Initiatives like Youth Ki Uraan aim to engage 1 million young people in peace-building and employment, proving Gen Z isn’t just memeing from afar—they’re organizing, innovating, and staying put to drive change.
The real tragedy isn’t generational warfare; it’s the missed opportunity for synergy. Nizamani’s piece, while poignant, risks romanticizing rebellion without responsibility—echoing X debates where critics call Gen Z “arrogant without achievement” or historically illiterate. But history shows progress comes from amalgamation, not alienation. We don’t need violent upheavals like those in Sri Lanka (where youth protests toppled a regime amid economic collapse) or Bangladesh (where student-led movements ousted a long-ruling leader). Instead, imagine a transcendental shift: elders sharing institutional wisdom, youth infusing tech-savvy energy. PTI’s amplification of youth voices is a start, but all parties—PML-N, PPP, and beyond—must collaborate.



































