The America I grew up in was building the interstate highway system, figuring out how to send a man to the moon, and developing the technology that created the internet. I was taught we were all part of a great melting pot, where in a classless society, we all had an equal chance to climb the ladder of success, and we try our best to live by the Golden Rule.
There were problems, but we continued our efforts to create a more perfect union. We all came from different places, but we shared a common belief and faith in our government. We were citizens of the greatest country in the world. Citizens pay their taxes, help those less fortunate, do not flush their toilet in their neighbors' drinking water or throw their garbage in the street, and never spit in the subway.
The America I grew up in was upwardly mobile, and mailroom to boardroom was an achievable goal. We always moved forward. We sent a man to the moon, and there were solar panels on the White House. The companies expected, encouraged, and paid for their employees to take advantage of every opportunity to grow and advance personally and professionally.
The America I grew up in began to change in the 1980s. The shareholders' profits became more important than the employees, R&D, and CapEx. We were told that our government, our common bond, what binds us together, is our enemy. For the last 40 years, people have been taught to see themselves not as citizens but as taxpayers. If you see yourself as a taxpayer, it is easy to believe you are the victim of the welfare queens, young bucks, illegal immigrants, and all those lazy people who live off your tax dollars. As you become more resentful and angrier, you lose empathy for your fellow citizens, and feed the selfish "I did it on my own" attitude that has poisoned this country for decades.
The reason this country is exceptional is because of our government. Since the Erie Canal, our government has made the investments that drive economic development and expansion. Capitalism will fill all the rungs of the ladder; the government's role is to ensure the bottom rungs are treated with dignity and respect. Jeff Bezos and Reed Hastings had transformative ideas that could not exist without a government agency, the USPS. Walmart and FedEx did not build the interstate highway system. That is a fact, not the liberal answer.
The weepy billionaire, the coffee guy, the CNBC show host who calls the Democrats "communists" have all forgotten that generations of Americans before them paid their taxes and worked hard to build the civil and physical infrastructure that allowed the future generations to achieve their pursuit of happiness. Everything Trump said in 2015 I have heard from self-identified conservative Republican friends, relatives, and acquaintances for the last 20+ years. Trump says the quiet words out loud, and that is why they love him.
The Supreme Court has been tainted by politics driven by dark money; soybeans, cows, and corporations have more political representation than citizens in Washington, D.C. William Barr and his buddies came sooo close to creating an autocratic theocracy. Unfortunately, I believe if the Democrats lose power in 2022, that will be the end of our already marginal democracy. —David F., New Jersey
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