How Economic Policy Trapped Workers in Impossible Choices

How Economic Policy Trapped Workers in Impossible Choices

Americans face four interconnected economic contradictions that make upward mobility mathematically impossible: they must spend to fuel growth while saving for emergencies—but have no money for either. They were told to pursue professional credentials for security—but those white-collar jobs are now primary targets for AI automation, and credentials don’t protect women and people of color from systematic wage discrimination. They’re told the economy is growing—but that growth concentrates among the wealthiest 10% while wages stagnate and corporate profits double as a share of GDP. The result: only 25% of Americans believe they can improve their living standards, 74% have abandoned American Dream goals due to economic pressure, and faith in the fundamental promise of American life has collapsed to record lows. These aren’t puzzles to solve through individual action—they’re systemic features of an economic order designed to transfer wealth upward while blaming workers for failing to achieve an impossible dream.

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America's 153–1 Vote Against Humanitarian Protection and What It Signals for Democracy

America’s 153–1 Vote Against Humanitarian Protection and What It Signals for Democracy

On December 10, 2025, the United States cast the only vote against a UN resolution protecting humanitarian workers—while Russia, North Korea, and 151 other nations voted yes or abstained. The vote came during the deadliest year on record for aid workers, with 383 killed in 2024 and 265 more by August 2025. The Trump administration justified its opposition by citing “radical gender ideology” in the text, reframing humanitarian protection as a culture war issue. This vote crystallizes a broader foreign policy realignment that isolates America from traditional allies while accommodating adversarial powers. As the National Security Strategy abandons great-power competition rhetoric and characterizes European allies in adversarial terms, analysts warn of structural vulnerabilities to foreign influence and the dismantling of oversight mechanisms. The transformation raises urgent questions about whether “America First” policies serve American interests—or something else entirely.

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