American Dream Essay
American Dream Essay
American Dream Essay
English III H
Ms. N
7 October 2018
“For many, The American Dream has become a nightmare.” said US senator Sanders, as
he discussed the topic of oligarchy in a Senate floor speech. This statement is ironic since the
term "American Dream", invented by historian James Truslow Adams in 1931, was originally
defined as "That dream of a land in which life should be better and richer and fuller for every
man, with opportunity for each according to his ability or achievement."(Planetizen) So, how
could a term with such motivational value now be contradicting its own purpose? Since 1931, the
definition of the American dream has changed, and now focuses on the attainability of high
status and materialistic needs. Due to our wealth inequality, corporate personhood, and
perception of moral values, the American Dream is no longer in reach for any middle or lower
class Americans.
As the American working middle class disappears, the gap between lower and upper class
widens, and the dream of succeeding and moving up the social scale becomes a frivolous
misconception. The price of housing, healthcare, childcare and college have gone up at a
tremendous rate while the income of middle class households suffers. The elite top 1% of
America own 38% of the overall financial wealth of the country, while the bottom 60% owns
2.3%. (Businessinsider) Meaning that, even though there is an effort being made by the bottom
60% to increase their financial wealth, factors such as the decrease of wages are holding them
back. An income estimate made by Berkeley economics professor Emmanuel Saez, shows that
95% of income made since 2009 have gone to the elite top 1%. (Businessinsider) Proving the
statement previously made about effect of decreasing wages on the lower class to be true, since
they are only receiving 5% of the income. The diverse and lush middle class is what made the
American dream possible, it provided stability to thriving members of the lower class, which is
American democracy has been said to be bribery on the highest scale, this foreshadowing
statement became true once corporations where given the same rights as individuals. The power
of free speech enables corporations have the ability to influence legislation and donate to
candidates. In other words, they have been able to change the law in their favor and donate to the
candidates whose views benefit them the best. Corporate personhood also gives corporations the
right to buy and sell property to other companies, sue individuals and other corporates in court,
protection from searches, as well as protection from double jeopardy and self-incrimination.
(Theatlantic) Corporate personhood gives corporates an identity of their own, separating it from
the shareholder. Even though corporate personhood benefits the capitalist market and increases
national wealth, Steven Brill - award-winning journalist and best-selling author- ensures that
corporate personhood is the pinnacle of the down fall of the American Dream. In an interview
with Vox, Brill stated, “That (corporate personhood), in turn, gave companies much more power,
and it weakened labor unions, which consequently undermined support for a real program for job
retraining in the face of automation, and in the face of global trade. There were several things
like this that made sense at the time, but in retrospect, they kick started a chain of events that led
to disaster.” (Vox) In other words, these acts promote greed upon the corporate realms which put
the people working for them at disadvantage, more specifically one that unable them from
moving up economically.
“Make America Great Again” is an example of an empty, yet powerful, phrase that has
called the attention of millions. Unlike Donald Trump’s campaign slogan, the term American
dream does have some truth behind it. By definition, a dream is a strongly desired goal or
purpose. To be considered a dream it must maintain the sense of desire, therefore if the American
Dream was achievable it would be more of goal than a dream. As human morality changes the
American dream has stopped focusing on core values and now focuses more on materialistic
needs such as money. Since we have stopped focusing on moral values, we can no longer define
whether or not we achieved the dream based of factors such as happiness, it has to be defined by
financial wealth. As wealth become the measuring unit of the American Dream, it becoming
Our economy, corporate personhood, and change in morality are factors that prove that
the American Dream is unachievable because too many people have already accomplished it and
they are not willing to sacrifice their power for the gain of others. Now, the American Dream it is
just an empty motivational phrase that will soon become an obsolete term.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qWApW2eliRM
Eskow, Richard. “7 Facts That Show the American Dream Is Dead.” Alternet,
www.alternet.org/economy/7-facts-show-american-dream-dead.
Barro, Josh. “95% Of Income Gains Since 2009 Went To The Top 1% - Here's What That Really
Means.” Business Insider, Business Insider, 12 Sept. 2013, www.businessinsider.com/95-of-income-
gains-since-2009-went-to-the-top-1-heres-what-that-really-means-2013-9.
Greenfield, Kent. “If Corporations Are People, They Should Act Like It.” The Atlantic, Atlantic Media
Company, 2 Feb. 2015, www.theatlantic.com/politics/archive/2015/02/if-corporations-are-people-they-
should-act-like-it/385034/.
Illing, Sean. “An Autopsy of the American Dream.” Vox, Vox, 6 Aug. 2018,
www.vox.com/2018/6/28/17469080/american-dream-steven-brill-inequality-poverty-tailspin.
“The U.S. Economy Just Got Hit with a Disturbing Piece of Bad News.” The Washington Post, WP
Company, 30 Mar. 2017, www.washingtonpost.com/news/wonk/wp/2017/03/30/the-u-s-economy-just-
got-hit-with-a-disturbing-piece-of-bad-news/?noredirect=on&utm_term=.a86b5fd12bd6
So Long, Middle Class: Middle-Income Jobs Are Disappearing the Fastest.” NBCNews.com, NBCUniversal
News Group, www.nbcnews.com/business/economy/so-long-middle-class-middle-income-jobs-are-
disappearing-fastest-n623886.
“The Real Meaning Of The ‘American Dream.’” Planetizen - Urban Planning News, Jobs, and Education,
www.planetizen.com/node/30899.