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Replying to @_jadespade_ Wealth in America buys you a nicer cell in the same prison. That's not freedom. That's just better accommodations in a system that's collapsing around everyone. Rich Americans think they've opted out. But they haven't. They're just insulated - temporarily. They live in gated communities because the streets aren't safe. They buy organic because the regular food supply is poisoned. They send their kids to private schools because public schools have metal detectors. Every "solution" they buy is just confirmation that the system is broken. They're not thriving. They're purchasing band-aids for problems they helped create. And the band-aids are getting more expensive and less effective. Eventually, the dysfunction reaches everyone. Smog doesn't stop at property lines. Drug addiction doesn't respect zip codes. Infrastructure collapse affects rich neighborhoods too. The American dream isn't dead for poor people and alive for rich people. It's dead for everyone. Rich people just have enough money to pretend a little longer. But even they know. That's why they're building bunkers in New Zealand. Link in bio if you'd rather just move to a country that works instead of buying your way around one that doesn't. ๐Ÿ†˜๐Ÿ‡บ๐Ÿ‡ธ

@nomadveronica
280 views12 likes2:38ENMay 26, 2026
400 words2227 characters21 sentencesReadability: Middle School

Transcript

This comment said, "The American dream only stands if you're rich." And the funny thing is, on the surface, that would be agreeable, right? We would all say, "Yeah, rich people could have the American dream." But then I thought about it some more, and I thought, "The American dream just doesn't exist." Because rich people have to live within the filth that they created. They live in New York City, where if you've ever been, you know, it smells like feces all over the damn place. And there's rats, and there's a lot of people out just in public on drugs, and they've created the systems that have allowed those things to happen on a systemic basis. We know that people who live in the nice areas of San Francisco and L.A. are constantly dealing with things like car break-ins and theft. So these are systems that the rich have created, and they have to live within. Even something as basic as their food sources. I wondered this because, you know, the rich people, they're the ones who have created all these problems with the government, and not taking care of making sure that we have regulations on our food or water. So I wondered, like, how many of these people, these really rich people, have, like, their own food sources, and I kind of think the answer is like next to none. These people don't cultivate their own non-Monsanto vegetables. They are eating the food that has the toxins that they're allowing in the food. So I don't understand where their brain is at in terms of, like, they've created all of this wealth for themselves, and yet they are trapped in their own terrible system. So although it's probably much nicer to be a rich person granted, I also think the American dream, as we imagine it, that idealistic situation doesn't exist for them either, because they have to hide away from the society that they've created as a result of all of their terrible policies and all of the things they've done to American society these days. I don't know. Do you agree with that? Do you think that rich people have the American dream, or do you think that they have some different creepy version that doesn't include safety, or safe food, or freedom, or any of the things the American dream would typically be?

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