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docrhw Weil's avatar

Unfortunately a lot of Americans have no concept of how miserable things were pre-FDR. They see movies and TV shows of a romanticized and sanitized America--national myths--that has little to do with the actual circumstances of how people lived. This leaves an opening for those who want to recreate a "great America again". It is not quite on the scale of, say, the stories of "pure Aryans" living in the woods of Germany but it is recognizably along the same track. (Mussolini's vision of turning modern Italy into a new Roman Empire is another recent example.)

In any case the result is that not enough citizens fight against such actions because they don't understand the implications or can't believe they will go that far. My father (1900-1990) who grew up in a New York City tenement slum and started with nothing appreciated how things had changed, and there are many people with more recent experiences--immigrants from poor countries or those who have left miserable areas in the US also know this. But again, that is not what most citizens understand. My dad once put it well in another context. Seeing how banks were being deregulated, the national debt was increasing, and legal games with the stock market were becoming common he said, "It's just like the 1920s, doesn't anybody remember the Depression." To which my mother answered, "No, they're all dead."

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Chris Brodin's avatar

What is now called the middle class is teetering on edge of collapse. Medical bankruptcy, excessive credit card rates, the cost of higher education are all causing the middle class to decline. We need a better social safety net much like the Nordic countries. I also do not understand the end game of the morbidly rich. How could you possibly spend a trillion dollars? Where is the morality?

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