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The Great Recession Didn T Kill The American Dream

666 Words3 Pages

For decades, the middle class has been lost and forgotten about. [Passive voice. Change to active.] What was once the class to strive for by the average, [Passive] does not seem to exist anymore. In today’s society, people are either rich or poor. A newspaper editor by the name Chapman, in Atlanta stated that “The Great Recession didn’t kill the American Dream. But the promise of a good life in exchange for hard, honest work has been bruised and frayed for millions of middle class Americans (qtd. in King 615). Chapman’s point is that even though the Recession couldn’t kill the American Dream, the middle class remained as strong as they could, and no matter how hard they fought to survive, some hope was lost. That every middle class American carries around battle scars that forever changed their lives. …show more content…

Many people feel like they are forced into the low income bracket and some people feel like they are forced into the upper class bracket. There is no sweet-spot like there once was, a place of just living comfortably. James Truslow Adams wrote that the American Dream “is that of a land in which life should be better and richer and fuller for everyone, with opportunity for each according to ability and achievement, regardless of social class or circumstances of birth” (qtd. in King 610). This is the traditional view we all love to believe at our core, but the reality of it is far different than the described fairytale above. Once upon a time the middle class carried and molded this great nation of ours’. I wholeheartedly endorse what McClelland said when he said, “as far as I’m concerned, it’s not fine for the middle class to be one of the losers (559). The government must do everything in its power to support and stimulate the middle class before it becomes

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