I get that and I don't disagree with your post in general. We've talked about this before. I love a bit of chaos myself. You know that.
I'm just saying that even though you know what quiet quitting is, I don't think you've fully considered how disruptive it truly is.
It messes up their averages. That means they mess up their work flow projections which, in turn, means they have to pay overtime. People who need the money have a chance to make it and they've not worn themselves half to death already.
Money actually trickles down for fucking once.
Then there's the psychological effect. Simethibg avout sticking it to the Man without jeopardizing your family mrans more people are likely to join the protest. And stay the course.
Also, there's a mental shift from the living to work mentality we're all trapped in that keeps us from collectively making change to working to live, which is how it should be.
These piss ant jobs should not be the measure of anyone's life.
Even if you go to a place of work, having more energy when you get home because you've not overextended yourself means you have more energy to start stepping away more purposefully and prudently. If you work remotely, you can spens that time getting in shape, learning new skills, building things that will divorce you from needing one of these jobs (like growing/raising your own food, buildibg passive income, getting out from under your mortgage or other debt, etc.)
Generally speaking, we all need three things to move away from predatory capitalism. Freesom Rest, time, freedom from debt.
Quiet quitting gives you the first two, which you can use to get the third.
And then they don't own you.
That's disruptive.