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You're wrong though. The general public is more likely to engage in civil unrest when they're struggling. The reality though is that while many Americans might be living paycheck to paycheck, they're not poor and not struggling. They are just bad at managing their finances and they have a lot to lose.
If you have more to lose than to gain, you won't participate in a civil war. But when you're a slave working in a cotton field, you have nothing to lose, only something to gain.
The idea that your average American is so poor is just laughable.
Either you're being purposefully deceitful, or you have a horrible understanding of macroeconomics. But please, let's just continue to ignore the elephants named record-inflation, rent records and housing crisis in the room.
over half a million live on the streets. flat out homeless. and then, the working poor, which you are if you live paycheck to paycheck. also, if you can’t live unless you work, you’re the working class.
There is a term for this called the "Valley of revolt" basically a people need enough empowerment to revolt but not enough to feel heard.
Also it's not necessarily just "bad with finances" it's that our expected standard of living doesn't match our actual standard of living. Rising cost and stagnant wages and all that.
I'm just imagining the sales of golf carts or those scooters going through the roof because Americans cant run a couple of miles during a civil war.
Ahaha! That's a good one!