The American Dream, Marxism, And The American Dream

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Many people who have spent their whole lives in America, have a knee-jerk reaction to a few words: ‘capitalism’ is good, ‘Marxism’ is communism and is thus evil, and the ‘American Dream’ is a realistic goal. However, the simplistic differentiation of these ideas causes the reality of each to slip through the cracks: the ‘American Dream’ of working hard to get rich is nearly impossible to achieve; when placed with capitalism, the ‘American Dream’ causes gross inequality; and “evil” Marx saw the inequality problems in the US over 100 years before they began. There is no doubt that the division between the rich and the poor in the US today is a problem, and by looking at Marx’s writings, as well as Rousseau’s Discourse on the Origin of Inequality, …show more content…

Where is the money gained from working harder going? To the capitalist. The benefits from the increased efficiency in the workplace have “nearly all gone to companies, shareholders, and top executives, rather than rank-and-file employees,” (Schwartz, 2015). As the higher classes get richer and inflation continues to rise, the worker, whose wages have been stagnated, is forced to work even harder to get the same pay – which just gives the capitalist more money. The richer the capitalist is, the poorer his worker is, but the more the worker needs to hang onto any job that they have. The worker is constantly faced with the reality that they are replaceable, but realizes that having a low-paying job is better than having no job, and the worker begins to sell more of their labor for less money in order to hold onto a job – which just gives the capitalist more money. The worker also realizes that he is in competition with his peers, as well as those who don’t have a job, making the worker even more willing to work for less money in order to hang onto a job – which just makes the capitalist more money. A cycle is created, making the rich richer and the poor poorer. The money that these capitalists are getting accounts for the fact that the wealthiest 1% of the United States population holds more money than the poorest 50% of the US population (Reich, Inequality for

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