
In "Dear America," combat veteran Graham Allen calls Americans to reclaim the unity felt on 9/12/2001. One of Huffington Post's "22 Veterans to Watch," Allen's passionate manifesto asks: Can we overcome division and restore the American Dream our founders envisioned?
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America stands at a critical juncture. The country that once proudly stood for faith, family, freedom, and community has gradually shifted toward selfishness, entitlement, and government dependence. This transformation didn't happen overnight but evolved through decades of subtle changes in our social fabric. Remember when neighbors actually knew each other? When electronic garage door openers arrived, we lost those casual front-yard conversations. TV dinners replaced family dinner table discussions. The 1960s challenged traditional values, the 1970s normalized substance abuse, and the 1980s MTV generation embraced instant gratification. Then came the digital revolution that fundamentally rewired our social connections. What began as reasonable internet legislation in the 1990s eventually enabled tech giants to control speech with unprecedented power. Social media platforms simultaneously isolated us while making us desperately dependent on others' validation. We became a society where following the crowd matters more than personal achievement. Even the American dream itself has been corrupted. What was once about opportunity-the chance to build something through hard work-has twisted into an expectation of guaranteed outcomes regardless of effort. This entitlement mentality has weakened our citizenry, and when citizens grow weak, government grows powerful because it no longer fears the people. What would General Washington think of us today? During the Revolution's darkest hours, he wrote, "Few People know the Predicament we are In." The same applies now-many Americans remain isolated in their digital bubbles, consuming only media that confirms their beliefs, completely disconnected from what we stand to lose.
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Creado por exalumnos de la Universidad de Columbia en San Francisco
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Creado por exalumnos de la Universidad de Columbia en San Francisco

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