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Showing Original Post only (View all)Guess who’s losing faith in the American Dream? Everyone. [View all]

chart, from the Brookings Institution's FixGov blog, is a pretty good barometer of the country's mood over the past two years: Americans everywhere, regardless of age, sex, education, party or ideology, are less likely to say that the American Dream - the notion that if you work hard, you'll get ahead - still holds true today.
Among all Americans, faith in the American dream dropped by 11 percentage points between 2012 and 2014. As Brookings' Bill Galston notes, members of Barack Obama's coalition have become particularly disillusioned: "The decline of belief in the American Dream is concentrated among women (down 14 percentage points since 2012), young adults (down 16 points), Democrats (17 points), and liberals (16 points)."
Republicans and conservatives, on the other hand, experienced smaller drops, and their overall belief in the American dream remains significantly more robust: 55 percent of Republicans believe in the American Dream today, compared to only 33 percent of Democrats.
Galston concludes that the era of hope and change may now be officially over. "The rhetoric of hope that worked so well in 2008 would be ineffective now," he writes. "In these circumstances, I suspect, citizens will be looking for leaders who offer concrete, credible plans for a better futureand who have what it takes to get the job done."
http://www.washingtonpost.com/blogs/wonkblog/wp/2014/09/24/guess-whos-losing-faith-in-the-american-dream-everyone/
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"citizens will be looking for leaders who offer concrete, credible plans for a better future—and
djean111
Sep 2014
#1
I had a college history teacher in the early 80's that was not impressed with the "American dream".
brewens
Sep 2014
#2
We needed someone far stronger than Obama turned out to be. It was clear from the start that
world wide wally
Sep 2014
#7
The American Dream is a fantasy. Such phrases mean whatever you want them to mean.
Zen Democrat
Sep 2014
#10
Yes, it is interesting that they did not break it down by race. Because since they did not this does
jwirr
Sep 2014
#24
You are not alone. I was born in 1941. Much of what you talk about is what I went through. We
jwirr
Sep 2014
#30
That's what happens when you have 2 Corporate Parties representing the 1%, and NOBODY
blkmusclmachine
Sep 2014
#21