Why the USA is declining
Why the USA Feels Broken
It's no secret that the United States — once seen as the land of opportunity — is slowly falling apart from within. The "American Dream" has become a meme, a fading illusion that doesn't reflect the reality most citizens face today.
Let's start with the basics: living costs. Food prices have skyrocketed beyond reason. A simple grocery run that used to cost $50 now hits $100, and eating out has become a luxury. Meanwhile, taxes keep rising, yet the average American sees no return on what they pay. Roads crumble, cities decay, and public infrastructure feels third-world compared to other developed nations.
Then there's healthcare, the biggest scam of them all. People go into debt just for getting sick. A hospital visit can bankrupt an entire family, and insurance companies profit off every broken bone or diagnosis. Americans work themselves to exhaustion just to afford basic medical care that should be a human right.
The homeless crisis is another stain on the country's image. Walk through any major city — Los Angeles, San Francisco, New York — and you'll see tents lining sidewalks, people suffering while billionaires launch rockets for fun. It's a system designed for the wealthy, not the working class.
And politics? A circus. Donald Trump made countless promises about fixing the nation, draining the swamp, and restoring prosperity — yet under his leadership, division, corruption, and misinformation only deepened. He put his ego before the country, turning politics into a reality show while the real problems — healthcare, wages, housing — continued to rot.
The truth is, America isn't broken by accident. It's broken by design. A system built on greed, upheld by corporations, and maintained by politicians who profit off people's pain. The USA still has potential, but until leaders start caring more about citizens than donors, the "greatest country on Earth" will keep crumbling under its own hypocrisy.