MILLER: A New Year’s resolution for America

Not long ago, Americans were vibrant, full of hopes and dreams. We told our children that if they stayed in school and worked hard, the world could be their oyster. Today, there has been a shift in our attitude toward life and the future. We talk about the American dream as if it were a distant memory. The “pursuit of happiness” has been replaced by the pursuit of mere survival.

There is no doubt that this national transformation began early in 2010. The jubilation surrounding Barack Obama’s election and promise of “hope and change” disintegrated one year after his inauguration into disillusionment and fear. While there is no doubt that the country already was in a recession before Mr. Obama took office, the excitement he brought to the nation began to wane amid people’s inability to keep their homes or find work. People simply began to feel helpless.

Fear and depression are powerful emotions. They also are contagious. We all know folks who have lost their homes or have been unemployed for years. We also are aware of many who are working jobs well below their skill level or who simply have dropped out of the workforce, giving up on finding a job. Their struggles are our struggles, and even though the majority of us still work, too many Americans experience sleepless nights — fearing the loss of their job is imminent or their career has become a dead-end street. This is not a good way to live.

Shaping and fueling the negativity engulfing our nation is an out-of-touch media that refuses to expose harsh realities. The citizenry is bombarded by reports that everything is getting better. Unemployment is dwindling, and Judgment Day for the rich is fast approaching. Still, deep down we all know the truth, and denial only deepens our national depression.

Our nation’s “creative” method of combating unemployment is to create a smaller workforce. The result is millions of folks giving up on finding a job. Also not mentioned is that we are becoming a part-time workforce. Between economic uncertainties, looming tax hikes and the cost increase in health insurance from full implementation of Obamacare in 2014, good full-time jobs are few and far between. These new realities do not bode well for a happy and prosperous citizenry.

Driving this outrage is a troubling disdain for success. The left in this country — aided by the old-guard press — is peddling the fallacy that all our economic woes are the result of the wealthy not paying their fair share of taxes. Financially successful people are vilified as the new enemy of the middle class. We were a happier people when as a nation we admired success and emulated the successful. Striving for something better was an equal-opportunity aspiration. The political right can’t seem to overcome its crippling public relations deficiency and rekindle our national ethos. Merely surviving is not a way to live and certainly not the American way of life.

Those who disagree with my argument will ask why Mr. Obama was re-elected. The truth is that his re-election confirms this point: We are devolving into a nation dependent on government — dependent on food stamps, unemployment benefits and a buffet of freebies. The ambition for success, for greatness, for personal achievement, is no longer part of our culture. On Election Day, millions of Americans voted for the food-stamp card in their wallet, not for the dream of acquiring an American Express Gold Card.

It doesn’t have to be this way. For the sake of my children — our children — it had better change.

My family didn’t come to the United States, escaping the Holocaust, in order to provide a mediocre existence for their children. This country wasn’t founded on the ideals of government dependency, and the Civil War wasn’t fought because freedom — personal and economic — was an afterthought.

In the wake of tragedy we are reminded this holiday season how precious our children truly are. We hug them longer and tell them more often than usual how much we love them. We have been reminded that our children are everything to us. Securing their health, happiness and prosperity should govern our lives. When we give up striving for the exceptional, we are giving up on our children because we no longer demand a better way of life for the next generation.

In 2013, let’s renew our national commitment to a better life for our children. Let’s reject mediocrity and embrace prosperity.

Paul Miller is a principal of Pauliegroup LLC, a Chicago-area new media and political consulting firm.

Originally published at http://www.washingtontimes.com/news/2012/dec/28/a-new-years-resolution-for-america/#ixzz2GecdSYxP

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  • http://www.facebook.com/johnjkirkwood John Kirkwood

    Outstanding! Thank you!

  • concerned taxpayer

    I wish schools did a better job of teaching entrepreneurship. Obviously one way to get a job is to make your own, but most people don’t know how to do that. Some websites geared to the “retired” crowd have business ideas, usually built on a skill. Another article talked about how young people have built businesses unrelated to their college degrees because they were good at something like yoga. Perhaps we need to help young people look beyond just getting hired by a company and look inside themselves at what skills they have and how to market them.

    • http://LennieJarratt.com Lennie Jarratt

      Yes, I wish they would as well. One way to help with that is to get on your local school board.

  • Wolf

    There is only “one” solution to restoring the American Dream and that is to shrink the Public Sector which today is starving the private sector of all its essential resources and in turn bankrupting America with excessive staffing levels, unreal compensations and millionaire pension plans. There is no way that this nation or any nation can support and underwrite 23 million multi-millionaires of the Public Sector. The restructuring and reform of the Public sector at the Federal, state and local levels will transfer over $2.5 Trillion annually back to the private economy and taxpayers. This will allow for real growth and entrepreneurship resulting in wealth, investments and jobs. There is no reason that the Federal Budget should exceed $2.4 Trillion annually – $800 Billion for Social Security (which should be self-sustaining if the contributions had been invested at the risk free rate), $500 Billion Medicare ($300 Billion is supportable from the contributions alone if they had been invested again at a risk-free rate), $500 Billion for Defense (although $400B should be more than sufficient) and $250 Billion Interest on the Debt (which will fluctuate but is now over $20 Trillion Treasury and Fed) leaving $350 Billion for the basic operations. It is clear that we are bankrupt and cannot afford to have aid programs to other nations at this time nor support the WB, IMF and UN for others. But this will eliminate the deficits today and eliminate the need to raise the debt ceiling further. It is time to perform zero based budgeting throughout the entire Public Sector. If one examines the bloated and mediocre Public School Systems one sees the fraud on the local levels. Every Parochial and Private School System functions at less than 30% of the Public System costs and produces a superb Education for its students. It is clear that the taxpayers can no longer tolerate the fraud that these System put on them. It is time for reform here cutting Property Tax Bills by over 60% immediately (over 40% from the Public Education cost reductions alone). Reforming the fraudulent Public Sector Pension Plans will eliminate over $37.5 Trillion in unnecessary obligations off the taxpayers. It is clear that this level of rape and robbery by the Public Sector on the taxpayers needs to end today in order for the nation to survive. It is the Public Sector cancer that is destroying the nation and its hardly ever mentioned in the media. Even King George never conducted this level of taxation on the forefathers of our nation as the Public Sector is exacting from the taxpayers today for their self-enrichment. The utilization of technology will provide additional savings in all these Public Sector operations and introducing true competition and competent management will save hundreds of billions more. It is time to operate the Public Sector in the 21st Century and eliminating all this waste. The only other option is to wait for the near term total default of the nation but that can bring some very dangerous economic and political aspects. Having escaped from Communism I believe in the strength of the individual, and it is painful to witness the destruction of a Great Country like America. It only takes a few dedicated individuals to start the turn around process, but we can no longer stand by and accept this level of fraud in the Public Sector.

    • concerned taxpayer

      What do you mean by risk free rate? Another problem is that medicaid has been expanded to include people who were never intended to receive this aide in the first place.