Young people are realizing that they are less likely than their parents to reach middle class.
Here’s hoping their liberally-indoctrinated reflexes don’t kick in this November. Some may realize that a business builder would be more advantageous to their future than a business regulator.
The “American Dream” means many things to many different people, but it generally meant; work hard, do right, live comfortably, and live better than your parents and leave a better world for your children. For the millenials that dream is dead. It is, and they are to blame for a good chunk of it because they don’t have the “work hard” component.
In the history of civilization, America has been an anomaly, because the American Dream was attainable to so many who sought it. For most of human history, society consisted of three tiers: one-tenth of one percent of hereditary aristocracy, who ran everything and lived in luxury. Then there was about 10% literate “scribes” who served the aristocracy and made the society work. They were allowed to create the wealth and touch a little bit of it, but were not allowed to actually own it. Finally, there was everyone else; a mass of mostly ignorant and illiterate people who were more or less seen as expendable things rather than people. They tilled the soil and in times of war, were the fodder for the army.
The America of old was not like that; we had mass education, where literate, and prosperous. But not anymore. It is the deliberate plan of the globalists to return us to that “state of nature” that so long existed. The real American Dream among the millenials to translate their parents middle class status into the 10% scribe status, because once you fall into the “masses,” you aren’t getting out of that pit.
I’m actually thinking of writing a short book to help other people my age mentally cope with the fact that they have no prayer of getting into the middle class, how to avoid scam jobs (which are popping up everywhere) and make the most of childhood memories of more prosperous times.