I understand what Thom Hartmann wrote his new book, The Hidden History of the American Dream: The Demise of the Middle Class — And How to Rescue Our Future. However, the book is less likely written for a boomer like me than for millennials and younger people who did not live through the Reagan Revolution. Hartmann said as much in an email:
“I wrote this book mostly to Zoomers, Gen-Xers, and other younger-generation Americans who don’t understand how we got a widespread middle class in the first place (it was FDR’s government intervention in the so-called “free market”) or why it shrank from two-thirds of us when Reagan came into office to a mere 43-47 percent of us today (Reagan’s 1981 mission was to gut the middle class to “preserve stability”).
When I came of age after finishing graduate school, Ronald Reagan was president and despite an advanced degree, military service, and being a white male with the privilege that means, the American Dream was the stuff of legends rather than something attainable. In his book, Hartmann explains the history of how the Middle Class came to be and what happened after Reagan was sworn in as president. The idea of an “American Dream” is still relevant, he said in a recent interview. His message is one of hope for restoring the American Dream, economic opportunity, and a strong Middle Class.
What makes this book relevant now is the fact that in the November 2024 election, the country is facing a choice between the Democratic Republic upon which we were founded and a rich person’s paradise where privatization of government functions and economic deregulation are the norm.
On Sept. 17, the author interviewed Hartmann about his new book. Click here to listen to the 27-minute interview. You will be glad you did. Hartmann discusses his view of the American Dream, the impact of Reaganism, K-12 and higher education, right to work, and more.
Thom Hartmann is a four-time winner of the Project Censored Award, a New York Times bestselling author, and America’s number one progressive talk show host. His show is syndicated on local for-profit and nonprofit stations and broadcasts nationwide and worldwide. It is also simulcast on television in nearly 60 million U.S. and Canadian homes.
To buy a copy of The Hidden History of the American Dream: The Demise of the Middle Class — And How to Rescue Our Future, click here.
