Is The American Dream Still Possible Essay

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    Most people assume the American dream is about achieving the nostalgic ideal of 1950s family life—Dad in charge of the household, Mom always looking pretty, and their children happily obedient and affectionate. The belief that success means living in a suburban home with a nuclear family causes many Americans to disparage any lifestyle that departs from this false image of family life. In truth, the suburbs are full of dysfunctional families and overdeveloped housing tracts. Many people in America

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    In his essay, “The American Dream: Dead, Alive, or on Hold?”He defined the American Dream as the “key to climbing out of the Great Recession, overcoming inequality, and achieving true prosperity” (King 611). He addressed the issue of high unemployment rate and the economic hardship during the Great Recession. King stated that through hard working, people can make their way up to a higher economic class: “72 percent of Americans still believed it was possible to start poor, work hard, and

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    it seems just as impossible to achieve the American dream. The American system is controlled by the wealthy who choose, which laws to impose in the benefit for themselves and organization. The inequality between the poor and rich is so wide this makes the American dream for most Americans impossible to achieve. To be wealthy like top 1% of the Americans, you need freedom of choice, an inheritance from rich parents and work hard to achieve the American dream. Before going to my claim

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    Many studies point out that the idyllic American childhood is a thing of the past. The kind of carefree childhood in which kids mostly spend their free hours playing basketball in the street, fishing down at the creek, and spending hours lying in the field, sucking on a ragweed stem and thinking about adventures is long lost. Childhood used to involve lots of dreams and skinned knees, not nervous breakdowns. But since then something has changed in America. A condition was starting to take over

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    America is not a perfect country. The American dream has been portrayed wrong for over 15 years. Our society cannot settle on one thing. The bigger, the better. Everything is growing and changing when it comes technology, people, and the government. “ If we can restrain size and scope of government, there’s every reason to believe that the American Dream will be strong for the rest of the century” (Mitchell 2015). This so-called great “American Dream” is everyone's thought of an ideal society where

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    where dreams manifest into reality. Dreams ranging from fame, wealth, or the simple quality of living in peace. But the American Dream more than that. The American Dream is the idea that American can provide opportunities for those who attempt to prosper through hard work. The American Dream is widely discussed amongst American citizens. Everyone trying to cement a definition and determine the likeliness of actually achieving the American Dream. Altercations which try validate the American Dream

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    Is the American Dream achievable by everyone? The American Dream is different for everybody, it is whatever you believe it is. The American Dream is that everyone has the equal opportunity to achieve the American Dream. “The road to success is not easy to navigate, but with hard work, drive and passion, it's possible to achieve the American dream.” (Hilfiger). You might have to work harder to achieve your dream but everyone can achieve their dream. The three main ideas for everyone's dream is for

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    In the early 1920’2 there was a dream that everyone yearned to reach. A dream of wealth, prosperity, and fame. This dream became the sole focus of many generations, leading them down a path of corruption and self-destruction. In F. Scott Fitzgerald’s novel, The Great Gatsby, you witness the steady destruction of three individuals as they spend their lives pursuing the American dream. This dream has caused depression, adultery and even the death of the Great Gatsby himself. Jay Gatsby is easily

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    Through their good works and determination, they obtain the American Dream. Many movies and books created in the twenty-first century display this very theme along with hints of the fairy tales of old. Fairy tales of a poor maiden finding prince charming and elevating to the richest in the land. Can a woman truly succeed without a man to help elevate us. Is it still possible to be a self-made maiden? Or is the whole idea of the American dream, a modern day fairy tale? In the story Cinderbella examines

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    “Shut up and eat your eggs.” Walter Younger does not want to sit down, shut up, and eat his eggs; he wants to pursue the American Dream. The Younger family in “A Raisin in the Sun” struggle with social mobility and defining each of his/her own unique African American identity. Each family member has an individual perspective on what it means to be successful in America, and how to obtain this prosperity. Although the women in the repeat the mantra of shutting down and eating one’s eggs, none of

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