Gould's Argument Essay: The Destruction Of The American Dream

634 Words2 Pages

I grew up in a home with both of my parents; one being self-employed and the other working within the educational system. They’ve worked their hardest to get me to where I am today; graduated top 10% of my high school class, attending a nice 4-year college, and they’re still working hard at this very moment that I may possibly have. We live in a standard one-story home in the suburbs with an “average backyard” and an “average house pet”; although we consider the values of the American Dream, does my family count to be considered the slightest of living the American Dream? Or do we stand under the lines of so-called poverty? When hearing the debate, they used their example of a ladder and it has rungs, which represented how the American Dream could be harder to reach depending on the size of the rungs. To sum up the analogy, if you were deep in poverty or even near the line, it would be “harder to climb” this ladder of success. But is that really true? • …show more content…

As a society, communities within communities, we tend to stride for different goals, tend to live different lives because we are different people. If we were to live out this “cookie-cutter” lifestyle, then it would go two ways: everyone wealthy or everyone in poverty. I believe that everyone has different destinies for a reason; most may not be wealthy, but they have to make it conform to them, they have to see what’s good for their life, despite America’s vision for everyone being

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