Now That You're Unemployed, How 'Bout Becoming an Ewok Chief?
The "American dream," the most common version of which portrays the U.S. as a middle-class suburban paradise with a chicken in every pot and a minivan in every driveway, dates from the years immediately after the U.S. helped defeat Germany and Japan in World War Two. So it's perhaps fitting that a prominent German magazine, Der Spiegel, now asks, "Is The American Dream Over?" A massive, six-part Der Spiegel feature, which carries no byline, argues that, yes, the American dream is dying and soon to be gone.
The articles argue that the U.S. has entered a economic, social, and cultural decline which it is unsuited to address. "The United States of 2010 is a hate-filled country," they write. "In a country with a limited concept of social cohesion, laughable from a European perspective, the quiet demise could have unforeseen consequences. How strong is the cement holding together a society that manically declares any social thinking to be socialist?"Americans have lived beyond their means for decades. It was a culture long defined by a mantra of entitlement, one that promised opportunities for all while ignoring the risks. Relentless and seemingly unstoppable upward mobility was the secular religion of the United States. Alan Greenspan, the former chairman of the Federal Reserve, established the so-called ownership society, while Congress and the White House helped free it of the constraints of laws and regulations.
The dream was the country's driving force. ... But at some point, everything comes to an end.
The United States is a confused and fearful country in 2010. American companies are still world-class, but today Apple and Coca-Cola, Google and Microsoft are investing in Asia, where labor is cheap and markets are growing, and hardly at all in the United States. Some 47 percent of Americans don't believe that the America Dream is still realistic.
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