Reimagining the American Dream: A Pledge for Shared Prosperity
The Dream Defined
In 1931, during the depths of the Great Depression, historian James Truslow Adams first articulated what many now call the American Dream. He described it not as a pursuit of material wealth, but as a vision of a society where every individual can reach their fullest potential, regardless of birth or circumstance. Adams wrote that the Dream is about “a land in which life should be better and richer and fuller for everyone, with opportunity for each according to ability or achievement.” This ideal, he insisted, is not about motor cars or high wages, but about a social order that allows people to be recognized for who they truly are.

What Does the American Dream Mean Today?
Decades later, the same question gnawed at a writer who had been chronicling American life on a blog since 2004. In November 2024, they began what would become the most challenging piece of writing they had ever attempted. They asked countless Americans to share their personal definition of the Dream, and compiled those voices into a single narrative. The goal was to understand what still unites a deeply divided nation.
That same month, the writer attended a high school production of The Outsiders, adapted from S.E. Hinton’s 1967 novel. The performance, staged by teenagers in a public school, brought a new revelation. The famous line from the 1983 film — “stay gold” — suddenly took on deeper meaning. It wasn’t just about preserving innocence; it was about sharing the American Dream. The writer realized that the Dream is incomplete until it is extended to others. The act of sharing is the final realization of the dream itself.
The Pledge to Share the American Dream
This insight gave birth to an essay titled “Stay Gold, America,” published on January 7th. Accompanying the essay was a Pledge to Share the American Dream — a two-part commitment designed to address immediate needs and long-term systemic change.
Short-Term Action: Immediate Relief
The first part of the Pledge focused on immediate aid. The writer’s family made eight separate $1 million donations to nonprofit organizations that serve vulnerable communities:
- Team Rubicon — disaster response
- Children’s Hunger Fund — food aid for children
- PEN America — free expression and literature
- The Trevor Project — crisis support for LGBTQ youth
- NAACP Legal Defense and Educational Fund — civil rights litigation
- First Generation Investors — financial literacy for underserved youth
- Global Refuge — assistance for refugees and migrants
- Planned Parenthood — reproductive health care
In addition, the writer made additional $1 million donations to strengthen America’s technical infrastructure, including support for Wikipedia, The Internet Archive, The Common Crawl Foundation, Let’s Encrypt, independent internet journalism, and several crucial open-source software projects that power much of the world today.

The call to action is clear: every American who can contribute should do so — even small amounts — to organizations they trust to help those most in need right now.
Beyond Immediate Fixes: The Second Act
Short-term aid, however necessary, is not sufficient. The Pledge to Share the American Dream includes a more ambitious second act — a deeper, structural approach to ensure that no one is left behind. While the details of this second act were not fully spelled out in the speech, the implication is clear: we must move beyond charity toward systems that guarantee a baseline of economic security and opportunity for all Americans.
The idea of a guaranteed minimum income — often referred to as universal basic income (UBI) — haunts the margins of this conversation. The writer’s essay and pledge leave open the possibility that the road not taken includes such a policy, as hinted by the original title. The goal is to build a society where the Dream is not a privilege for a few but a birthright for everyone.
Staying Gold Together
The American Dream, as defined by Adams and reimagined by modern voices, is not a static prize to be attained alone. It is a collective endeavor — a promise that must be renewed and shared across generations. Whether through immediate donations, long-term policy changes, or simple acts of kindness, the imperative is the same: stay gold, America.
By sharing the Dream, we fulfill its highest purpose: a nation where every person can achieve their fullest stature, recognized not for the circumstances of their birth, but for the content of their character and contribution.
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