Probably diversely. Gen X had the benefit of at least absorbing the aesthetic of authentic rebellion as their sort of trademark coming-of-age social trend... Gen X's formative movies and media are full of outcasts rejecting labels and going their own way. While this doesn't mean every Gen Xer actually did that, it did put the idea in their head, so I think they tend to be more likely to have let their circumstances dictate their political views, and you have a broader spectrum of conservative, liberal, and leftist voters amongst them.
Millennials meanwhile are the Harry Potter generation, whose rebellion against authority is always on behalf of another authority they prefer more. Their resistance against being told what to do is always with the caveat of them still wanting to be told what to do, just by someone who's telling them to do things they think they should already. Their rebels are rarely sincere outcasts but instead popular, beloved icons who become something akin to religious figures to the resistance they inevitably form. They actively want to be labeled and demand their labels be acknowledged. They rage on behalf of the machine.
Agreed. Gen X is the most based of the generations and so far, the last decent one as a whole unless the Core Zoomers and Late Zoomers reject the mob mentality and pretentious virtue signalling of the Millennials and Early Zoomers.
Generation X is a generation largely defined by individualism and are often either apolitical or tend to lean in a more centrist or moderate liberal direction overall.
Honestly, I'd wager the bulk of Gen Z will trend in a similar individualist direction as Generation X did before them. The Early Zoomers are woke as fuck, but they overlap heavily with the Late Millennials.
The core of Gen Z are those born in 2000 onward. The Early Zoomers were born in the second half of the 90's and grew up under similar cultural conditions as the later Millennials born in the early 90's.
Assuming the Millennials do manage to get it together and have their own version of "Yippie to Yuppie" when the Core and Late Millennials start hitting their forties and fifties en masse, then they might trend rightward like the Boomers eventually did.
And if the Millennials really are too far gone, then I'd wager the Alpha Generation will trend to a lot more rightward direction in their teens, twenties, and early thirties. The Late Zoomers and the Alpha Generation are at that same age that most Millennials were when the Religious Right was at its height of power and influence.
Seeing that SJW's initially emerged as a response to the Religious Right that the Millennials grew up under, I would not be surprised if the Gen Alpha kids respond in kind when they get to our age.
Generation X were the actual teenagers and young adults during the heyday of the Religious Right, much like how Generation Z are during today's SJW zeitgeist. The bulk of Generation X did their own thing and rebelled through individualism. Gen Z is shaping up to do the same, excluding the early component that overlaps with the Millennials.
Millennials will likely end up being every bit as hated by the Alpha Generation as they hate the Boomers right now.