Saturday, October 27, 2012
Saturday, October 13, 2012
Question 4 Comments
|
It’s the dream that you, too, can get rich.
|
I think the American Dream is characterized by three
promises: progress, access, and redemption. Progress is the promise of
unlimited opportunity in a land where there is enough for everybody. Access is the promise of equal opportunity,
in a land where all doors are open to everyone; implicit in this is a promise
of safety which allows us freedom of movement and ambition. Redemption is the promise that gives our
struggles meaning. The American Dream pledges that our hard work, our
loyalty, and our self discipline in delaying gratification will ultimately be
rewarded. Unfortunately, because these promises are built on a
socio-structural foundation of inequity, the
|
It's not about one of these but a combination that equals
the American Dream
|
Opportunities beget more opportunities- share freely!
|
This is fundamentally an impossible question to
answer. Americans cannot have one of
these without the others –
|
I think "the dream" has been replaced by
selfishness and/or is being hoarded by a few at the cost of the many.
|
Liberty, security and the economic stability to achieve
virtually any opportunity through education and hard work, regardless of race,
religion, national origin, sex, sexual orientation, age, physical challenges,
or any other challenges or limitations, while respecting our common good, and
keeping to the spirit of liberty and JUSTICE for all.
|
Owning your own home
|
A blend of these definitions. It has elements of all these.
|
This is the only one that addresses all the other, selfish
options.
|
Stability, equal justice administered without corruption
and in a manner that motivates constructive risk taking as a method to
achieve any citizen’s hierarchy of need while rewarding each effort for
measurable social benefit.
|
Progress: the freedom to overcome challenges and create
new visions.
|
I was torn between
|
Limited government, but some basic protections for the
average citizen
|
Corporate control
|
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)