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Honestly? With how much money the rich has, a major prerequisite for me would be a massive wealth tax on their current fund.
With how much money most of the companies that are problem children today have, a general strike isn't effective.
Take amazon for example, it has a yearly operating expense of 569B, and has a current operating debt of 52B (or a total of 338B in liabilities)
It keeps around 101B cash on hand in immediate withdrawable assets, and has a total of 624B in total assets.
Assuming the total yearly expenses can be easily dividable by 12(it likely couldn't) and without knowing how much money they end up saving in salary due to the strike, In order for a strike to really hurt Amazon, you would need to strike for almost 3 months before you even start eating into it's non-immediate withdrawal assets.
How many people do you know that has 3 months worth of salary stored up for a thing like this? I don't know many.
A union /might/ have solved that situation but, that money doesn't just appear out of thin air, its collected via dues, the same dues that the everyday person fights against, and if you don't /currently/ have a union, you won't have the funds built up.
Our local teachers union has that issue currently. They ruled that the union MUST accept people into it without paying the union fees, which more or less made it so the teachers union is all bark no bite as it couldn't afford a general strike as a result of it, because they would need to pay everyone, including the people who aren't actively contributing back.