@MrRoboto75
Yeah, it is a lie... But that version of the American Dream is still bring sold in current politics, and it is being sold as a right you need to fight to keep, not as something to be earned.
Because, unfortunately, that's how you get votes in Michigan or Pennsylvania. Coal and manufacturing still want the fantasy that those industries will come back to the US, any day now.
I don't think the American Dream was ever a right - it was always something you had to work toward. Or did my socioeconomic group get a different version of the pamphlet? I can see how you have to work differently or perhaps even harder now than decades ago, but never has the American Dream been without work.
The American Dream has a large component of "be your own boss," which entails hard work, and being free from a Tyrant that prevents you from being your own boss. Maybe only recently has the dream morphed to "you can get lucky and be so rich you no longer have to work." Basically that "be your own boss" spirit has been lost, and it feels to many of us that it's now "oh it's so hard to be your own boss, we just want society at large to take care of everyone."
If the sentiment was "government, get out of our way and protect us from the Oligarchs so that we can be our own bosses" instead of "government, we don't want to be bosses but make sure those Oligarchs have to pay for us anyway" many more traditional conservatives would not have such a hard time.
Problem honestly is, is that the loyalty between a company and the people that work for it is gone, at many levels in the company. Careers aren't ladders anymore, and hard work isn't worth the trouble. From personal experience, working hard just meant I got more work and responsibility piled on to my normal duties, yet my hours and pay stayed the exact same. Instead of, say, being manager, I'm instead just two workers in one.
Nowadays staying at one job too long just makes you a sucker, and you have to make your own promotion by getting hired somewhere else for the wage your experience and work really deserved all along.
Same loyalty disconnect is at the top, though, as a CEO will do something to boost stock value in an unsustainable way only to quit before those consequences reach his stock-value pay, and get a severance bonus.
Either way, the prosperity was more due to dumb luck than anyone's hard work. The US was just bombed the least over the two world wars, unlike anybody who could've competed with them.
Anyway I was just interested by the idea of the American Dream involving "be your own boss", where I see it more as the government giving everyone an opportunity even when no one else will.
Entrepreneurship can be the ultimate rejection of the labor market, but in present times entrepreneurship is less and less viable. Brick and mortar shops have only diminished outside of very specific niches, and large corps like wal-mart or amazon can just 'cheat' at competing by operating at a loss. Covid was the death knell for a lot of small business.