The American Dream Is Not Dead: (But Populism Could Kill It) (New Threats to Freedom Series)
by Michael R. Strain
ISBN 13: 978-1599475578
Book description

Populists on both sides of the political aisle routinely announce that the American Dream is dead. According to them, the game has been rigged by elites, workers canā€™t get ahead, wages have been stagnant for decades, and the middle class is dying. Michael R. Strain, director of economic policy studies at the American Enterprise Institute, disputes this rhetoric as wrong and dangerous. In this succinctly argued volume, he shows that, on measures of economic opportunity and quality of life, there has never been a better time to be alive in America. He backs his argument with overwhelmingā€”and underreportedā€”data to show how the facts favor realistic optimism. He warns, however, that the false prophets of populism pose a serious danger to our current and future prosperity. Their policies would leave workers worse off. And their erroneous claim that the American Dream is dead could discourage people from taking advantage of real opportunities to better their lives. If enough people start to believe the Dream is dead, they could, in effect, kill it. To prevent this self-fulfilling prophecy, Strainā€™s book is urgent reading for anyone feeling the pull of the populists. E. J. Dionne and Henry Olsen provide spirited responses to Strainā€™s argument.


Recommended on 1 episode:

A Conservative Futurist and a Supply-Side Liberal Walk Into a Podcast ā€¦
ā€œThe Jetsonsā€ premiered in 1962. And based on the internal math of the show, George Jetson, the dad, was born in 2022. Heā€™d be a toddler right now. And we are so far away from the world that show imagined. There were a lot of future-trippers in the 1960s, and most of them would be pretty disappointed by how that future turned out. So what happened? Why didnā€™t we build that future? The answer, I think, lies in the 1970s. Iā€™ve been spending a lot of time studying that decade in my work, trying to understand why America is so bad at building today. And James Pethokoukis has also spent a lot of time looking at the 1970s, in his work trying to understand why America is less innovative today than it was in the postwar decades. So Pethokoukis and I are asking similar questions, and circling the same time period, but from very different ideological vantages. Pethokoukis is a senior fellow at the American Enterprise Institute, and author of the book ā€œThe Conservative Futurist: How to Create the Sci-Fi World We Were Promised.ā€ He also writes a newsletter called Faster, Please! ā€œThe two screamingly obvious things that we stopped doing is we stopped spending on science, research and development the way we did in the 1960s,ā€ he tells me, ā€œand we began to regulate our economy as if regulation would have no impact on innovation.ā€ In this conversation, we debate why the ā€™70s were such an inflection point; whether this slowdown phenomenon is just something that happens as countries get wealthier; and what the governmentā€™s role should be in supporting and regulating emerging technologies like A.I.
James Pethokoukis May 21, 2024 3 books recommended
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