Why the American Empire Was Destined to Collapse
By Nomi Prins, AlterNet
Posted on March 7, 2012, Printed on March 10, 2012
Several years after the Wall Street-ignited crisis began, the
nation’s top bank CEOs (who far out-accumulated their European and other
international counterparts) continue to hobnob with the president at
campaign dinners where each plate costs more than one out of four US
households make in a year. Financial bigwigs lead their affluent lives,
unaffected, unremorseful, and unindicted for wreaking havoc on the
nation. Why? Because they won. They hustled better. They are living the
American Dream.
This is not the American Dream that says if you work hard you can be
more comfortable than your parents; but rather, if you connive well,
game the rules, and rule the game, your take from others is
unlimited. In this paradigm, human empathy, caring, compassion, and
connection have been devalued from the get-go. This is the flaw in the
entire premise of the American Dream: if we can have it all, it must by
definition be at someone else’s expense.
Saturday, March 10, 2012
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