A quick reminder-- During the last WGA strike the studios refused to negotiate, walked away from the table, and basically forced the writers into a strike. Then they did everything they could to make sure the WGA took the blame for crew members being out of work, even when the studios refused to go back to the table. Meanwhile during the strike studios bragged at trade shows about how much money they were making with streaming and two studio CEOs took raises that were more than the WGA's wildest-dream-amount opening offers. Not their total salary, mind you. The amount of their raise was more than the WGA was asking for.
They're already gearing up to do all the same things again. So no matter what you read or see in the days to come, there's only one side to blame for this. And it's not the folks walking the picket line.