- cross-posted to:
- hackernews@derp.foo
- cross-posted to:
- hackernews@derp.foo
Americans are increasingly unlikely to believe that those who work hard will get ahead and that their children will be better off than they are, according to two recent polls.
Americans are increasingly unlikely to believe that those who work hard will get ahead and that their children will be better off than they are, according to two recent polls.
It was never alive in the first place, it’s just a mean of giving some glimmer of false hope while the oligarchs continue being parasites.
I disagree, back in the 60s it was totally possible to find a decent paying job, have a couple of kids, buy a house to store them in, get a new car every few years, send your kids off to school, go on vacations and retire at an age old enough to enjoy some time with the grandkids. Now that really isn’t a reality for the average person.
It was, briefly, in postwar America.
If you were of the fair-skinned persuasion, maybe…
You’re right, but important to remember that 90% of America was white in 1960.
You don’t think any American generation did better than the previous one through work?
Some generations did better than previous ones due to economic conditions at the time, and this is especially true in the period between WWII and Reaganomics. Some individuals experience both hard work and success, but there are a great many hard working individuals who have no personal wealth to speak of.
As for working hard, (unless I miss your point) - it’s hardly new for older generations to accuse younger ones of not wanting to work.
Why qualify this with “through work?”
Because that’s part of “the American dream”?
Not really?
How would one “work hard” without working?
Naw after WWII when half the men were dead, everyone had jobs, houses, and two women fawning over them. It was great, if only we had a way to kill off half the people so everyone could have twice as much.