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“”It's called the American Dream, 'cause you have to be asleep to believe it.
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—George Carlin,[1] the guy who realized the American Dream for himself |
“”Sadly, the American dream is dead.
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—Donald Trump,[2] the greatest orange president of America |
The American Dream means the American value and common political promise of "life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness". It aims to create and/or maintain a United States where any American contributing to the common good can live a satisfactory lifestyle. In particular it promises that community-contributing Americans can securely acquire basic life necessities, and further pursue their dreams through making the right choices. Part of this equal opportunity ethos includes encouragement for immigrants to find health and wealth in the USA. However as the "American Dream" is elusive to much most of the US population, immigrants often end up as short-handed suckers working in the back of a gas station for well below the cost of living, before a 2 hour commute to a crowded, multi-family home.
The stereotypical "American dream" is widespread ownership rates of suburban homes with white-picket fences, nuclear families each with a couple children and a pet dog, ice cream dates in High School, a smiling wife who casually holds a shotgun while watching her husband cook BBQ in the backyard, and a strong happy, community.
James Truslow Adams popularized the term in his 1931 book Epic of America.[3]
In the 1950s, television shows of the era, such as Father Knows Best and Leave It To Beaver, promoted the American Dream. These programs displayed a supposedly honest, suburban lifestyle. In this scenario, the father was the head of the household and the pinnacle of knowledge. The mother had no interest in working outside the home. Instead, she did the household chores, aided by all the fancy new gadgets that made housework a breeze. In a change from before World War II, smaller families were encouraged, with two or three children being the new norm.[4] Lifestyles and standards of living may change, but the fundamental concept of the American Dream remains the same.
While influential during the fifties, the Dream concept came under some criticism from hippies and associated radicals during the sixties for supposedly placing too much importance on the accumulation of material wealth. This is somewhat ironic, since the definition of the American Dream does not necessarily have anything to do with becoming wealthy; it is all about having a better life and realizing one's aspirational dream(s).
Works such as Arthur Miller's The Death of a Salesman (1949) point out that people may have difficulty in achieving this idealized lifestyle.
Today, the 1950s brings up nostalgia of an golden age for extreme members in the Republican Party, replacing the Gilded Age (this being the golden age of 1950s conservatives). It is interesting to note that the man in charge at the time was responsible for the Interstate Highway System, NASA, the expansion of Social Security, and the Department of Health, Education, and Welfare, the combating racial segregation in Arkansas, the 90%* marginal income tax for top earners,[note 1] and warned against a "military-industrial complex."[note 2] These Republicans are not necessarily wrong, but not in the way they expect.
Perhaps the most contemptible derivative the American Dream can be found in Red China, where the "Chinese Dream" has been adopted by Xi Jinping as a government slogan. It essentially boils down to "hey, here's some more money in your pockets so you can handwave the abuses of our dictatorship for a few more years." On the national level, the Chinese Dream seems dangerously expansionist, given China's territorial ambitions in Asia and quest for regional, then global hegemony, subverting democracy in the process.