The American Dream didn’t die — it was kidnapped, held for ransom, and sold on eBay to the highest corporate bidder.
Once upon a time, the “dream” was simple.
You start a small business? You could actually survive.
You get a degree? You could actually earn enough to justify the blood sacrifice of tuition.
You go all in — med school, nursing school, dentistry, engineering? That used to mean stability. Respect. A life.
Now?
Now you can have a PhD and still get offered a salary that wouldn’t keep the lights on in a Sims house.
And if you dare say, “Hey, I’d like to be paid what I’m worth,” the corporations look at you like:
“Oh don’t worry, sweetheart… we’ll just import someone we can underpay by 75% and call it ‘innovation.’”
Meanwhile you’re drowning in student loans charging interest like a loan shark in a back alley.
And don’t even start on small businesses.
You can’t open a coffee shop — Starbucks has colonized every corner like it’s Manifest Destiny 2.0.
You can’t open a hardware store — Home Depot and Lowe’s have tag-teamed the entire country.
Small business isn’t “risky” anymore; it’s a suicide mission.
People fight to “live the dream” while corporations fight to eliminate competition like it’s pest control.
And then you’ve got the Reagan-brainwashed Boomers still running around yelling,
“We need small government! Government bad!”
Honey, WHEN Reagan said that, the population was like 230 million — not 340 million on a hyper-complex, interdependent, globalized economy where half the states couldn’t pave a road without federal money falling from the sky.
You shrink government today?
You don’t get “freedom.”
You get Mississippi in every state — broke, corrupt, under-resourced, and praying someone shows up with a FEMA truck.
Smaller government in 2025 doesn’t mean “more liberty.”
It means more corruption, less oversight, and every state government running wild like toddlers with open flame.
But here’s the real twist:
You let the system collapse hard enough, long enough, and guess what happens?
Every globalist institution you claim to “fear” starts showing up like:
“Wow… y’all clearly can’t manage yourselves. Want us to take over?”
And that’s how you lose sovereignty — not because someone invaded, but because you couldn’t stop fighting each other long enough to govern your own damn country.
If you’re anti-globalism, anti-UN, anti-“outside control,”
then maybe — just maybe — stop cheering for policies that turn your own nation into a failed state.
And lastly, to the couch-commentators who scream “just fix it!”
while never once stepping into public service:
Sit down.
If you’re not willing to join the arena — literally join the federal workforce, speak up, organize, or freaking VOTE — then you don’t get to critique the people who are out here taking hits, making decisions, and trying to keep this country from eating itself alive.
The American Dream isn’t dead.
It’s suffocating under monopolies, underpaid degrees, imported under-wage labor, anti-government brainwashing, and a generation of citizens who want change but refuse to get off the sidelines.
This boycott, this reset, this awakening?
It’s not about “punishing” companies.
It’s about dragging the American Dream back from corporate captivity and putting it back where it belongs —
in the hands of the people who actually built this country, not the ones who bought it.