Is the American Dream Just a Dream

682 Words2 Pages

Imagine working hard at a job that you kind of like. That job provides a way to purchase a house for your family and save for the future. A lot of Americans do this every day, and we call it The American Dream. Traditionally, Americans have sought the reach the American dream of success, fame and wealth through thrift and hard work. However, the industrialization of the nineteenth and twentieth centuries began to erode the dream, replacing it with a philosophy of “get rich quick” (looking for the source). Sure, the opportunity is greater in America than anywhere else in the world to really make something of yourself. Regardless of your background, most people in this country, who have the will power, can receive a solid education, a well paying job, and the means to own a home. This all sounds well and good, and at one time was the image of the American Dream come to life. However, in modern American culture, materialism has come to define the new American Dream. Today, a big part of the concept of the American dream has become more about what others think about you, rather than what you think of yourself. Instead of working hard to satisfy thier own needs, people want to compare themselves to their neighbors. “People are trying to ‘keep up with the Jones’ by defining their worth on the basis of being richer than your neighbor; with the availability of social media, rich people can influence people all over the world” (“Is the American Dream Becoming too Materialistic”). What this means is that our neighbors aren’t just the ones next door. Our neighbors have become The Kardashians and every celebrity on MTV cribs. For the average American, keeping up with what famous people have is impossible, but for some strang... ... middle of paper ... ... for sale. It can be bought by whoever has the most money, not necessarily by who works the hardest. For example, “fifty years ago, homes averaged 1700 square feet. Now that figure is up to 27000” (Sandler 76). Homes these days are bigger than what is needed to survive. It’s a way for adults to show their success. The bigger the home, the more successful the person. Some people even go into a lot of debt to try keeping up with the jones in the area of homes and cars. Some of them ca’nt really afford what they are driving or the home they are living in. “In his book The American Dream, author Jim Cullen identifies four basic ways of dreaming: upward mobility, equality, home ownership, and the lush lifestyles of the American West Coast” (Kaagan and Graham). Being able to check all these things off a list makes Americans think they are happy and accomplished.

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