All this crap just kept hardening my already libertarian heart. They don't want to get out of the shit they are in, the just want more gibs.
I have some degree of sympathy for this, but more on a broad than an individual scale. People are convinced by so many signs and indications and pressures in society that we exist in an era of abundance, things are simple, the world is easily understood. Many people, bourgeois especially, are essentially raised since childhood with the idea that life's going to be simple and straightforward. It can take years and years to unwind that bad attitude, especially when we've got so many parasitic entities where you can go and deflect blame for all eternity.
I might have disdain for individuals that refuse to grow up and realize that life isn't easy - that taking benefits on their own won't fix one's problems, that landing on a safety net is not the same as rebounding - but I see the larger issue as a reductive, simplistic system of pop-cultural icons and attitudes that encourage people to believe that they'll never have to budget or sacrifice like their parents had to, and that it's denigrating to expect them to. I find this attitude and naivety overlaps heavily with wokesters.
You can see, then, why it might be that this attitude carries along to wokesters elsewhere. The Floyd case had to be open-shut, no details, no need for a well-crafted argument that wasn't hinged on exaggeration -- because by all the pop culture they consume, the bad guys are always obvious and it's always a case of good-evil with simple solutions. Their having to puzzle out the more complicated questions of race, law enforcement, justified use of force, or the myriad other socioeconomic things isn't just burdensome - it's denigrating to expect them to have to do it. They were born of good stock, see; they deserve to get ass-pats for saying the world's as simple as their impression of it.