The American Dream Failure Essay

1139 Words5 Pages

The Declaration of Independence which kickstarted our great nation proclaimed that each American is granted life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness. This has become the greatest lie in our history. Inflaming poverty rates, social segregation, and futile opportunities to succeed have caused the American Dream to become an impossible feat in today's society. Additionally, the ability to achieve this dream is only possible for the wealthy upper class as the difference between poor city dwellers and rich suburban burghers expands daily. Consequently, discrimination causes permanent damage to our society and causes unity to be unattainable. Although the American Dream may have been possible many years ago, the population can't achieve it now …show more content…

For example, Immigrants are given small apartments in large cities, and sometimes with more than one family living inside. Their homes are cramped and dirty with many immigrants living in very close quarters ("Suburbia"). In many instances, immigrants move to the United States to escape the danger of their home country. It is not their fault they have been put in such an awful, desperate situation, and in return given fewer opportunities to succeed in the American Dream that they initially set out for. It is hard to escape such a life of economic desperation which outlines why everyone can't reach the American Dream. Although many still say that the American dream is still attainable to the average American, the dream cannot be achieved by poverty-stricken immigrants or racially discriminated against people who don't have the same opportunities. Additionally, the possibility of the American dream should be extended to a greater population. Our government should adopt the responsibility of the minority and help their cause as they are in a more critical state than the average American. Furthermore, those in the higher social classes see the suburbs as an escape from lower social classes like immigrants which allows for greater segregation between social classes ("Suburbia"). As the American Dream changed throughout society, many depict it as a happy family, with a house, and a steady income. But only the wealthier people in the suburbs could achieve this. For many poorer individuals in the city, it was impossible to escape, like immigrants who were economically unable to leave. For a society developed on the labor and mistreatment of slaves, it doesn’t seem like we have shifted the social hierarchy much at all. The mistreatment of any of these minorities comes from the environment they grew up in or have been