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@Anonymous

You want to know how the American Dream died? How the middle class got gutted and the system got hijacked by the rich? It didn’t happen overnight. It happened step by step, policy by policy, lie by lie — starting in the d### 1980s.

They called it trickle-down economics — give tax breaks to the rich and corporations, and somehow that was supposed to “lift all boats.” Well, guess what? The only thing that trickled down was economic insecurity. Wealth didn’t flow to the workers. It piled up at the top, like a rigged casino where the house never loses and the dealers never get a raise.

Then they legalized stock buybacks in 1982, which used to be considered market manipulation. Now CEOs could pump company profits into buying their own stock to inflate prices and fatten their bonuses, instead of raising wages or investing in workers. Productivity kept climbing — but your paycheck didn’t. Where did all that value go? Not to you. It went straight into executive pockets and shareholder vaults.

Next up: private equity and leveraged buyouts. Corporate raiders started scooping up companies with borrowed money, gutting them, slashing pensions, laying off workers, and walking away rich. All with no real regulation. The only thing that got leveraged was your job security.

Then they decided pensions — real retirement plans — were “too expensive.” So they shoved us into 401(k)s, acting like it was an upgrade. They dumped the responsibility of retirement onto individual workers with no financial education, no wage growth, and no safety net. Meanwhile, Wall Street got trillions in fresh capital to play with — and most people will never retire with dignity because of it.

Then came offshoring. They shipped our manufacturing jobs overseas to pad profits and “maximize shareholder value.” They built middle classes in other countries while tearing down ours. They told us it was good for the economy. Which economy? Not ours.

We piled on national debt through tax cuts and endless wars, devalued the dollar, and then watched the 2008 financial crash burn everything down. Predatory lenders targeted the poor, sold junk mortgages, and lit the housing market on fire. Then — just like clockwork — the banks got bailed out with your tax dollars while millions of families lost everything.

And when home prices crashed? The rich bought them up. They swooped in like vultures, buying foreclosed homes in bulk while ordinary people struggled to survive. Rents started climbing, and homeownership started slipping out of reach.

Then in 2010, the Supreme Court gave us Citizens United — and with it, Super PACs. Billionaires and corporations could now spend unlimited amounts to buy elections, spread disinformation, and entrench power. They didn’t just rig the market — they rigged democracy.

And then came 2020 — the pandemic. A crisis that could’ve brought the country together turned into another chance to loot the system. Small businesses were crushed, wealth was transferred upward at historic levels, and the rich made billions while everyone else scrambled to survive. We printed trillions — which people needed — and it still ended up in the hands of corporations and landlords.

And while everyone was focused on survival, they dropped interest rates to historic lows, not to help you buy a home, but to give institutional investors a green light to borrow free money and corner the housing market. Now, entire neighborhoods are being bought up by hedge funds. You think you’re competing against other families to buy a home? You’re not. You’re competing with billionaires. Good luck with that.

And what do we have now, in 2025? 25% inflation since the pandemic. Real wages are stagnant. Retirement is a joke. Healthcare is a luxury. Homeownership is out of reach. Student debt is a lifelong sentence. And the middle class? It’s gone.

This didn’t just happen. It wasn’t bad luck. It was engineered.

By lobbyists, by billionaires, by bought-off politicians. They sold you a fantasy while writing policy that made sure you’d never reach it. The American Dream didn’t die. It was murdered.

And until we call it what it is — until we stop pretending this is just the way things are — nothing changes. Because this wasn’t the invisible hand of the market. This was a very visible, very deliberate hand reaching into your pocket and taking everything you built.

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