“Not long ago, a handful of middle-level executives, talking informally around a luncheon table in Manhattan, found themselves all agreeing with one of their number who said, ‘I think children born fifty years ago could look forward to a better future than my children can.’”
This observation, from a special edition that Fortune published in 1975 to kick off the American Bicentennial era, could easily have been made at a Manhattan lunch table in 2026. And even today, as writer Thomas Griffith noted then, “that’s a pretty shocking observation, for a basic ingredient of the American dream is that the members of each succeeding generation shall be further advanced than their parents in the pursuit of happiness.”
On America’s 250th birthday, Fortune’s 1975 bicentennial issue reads as a clear-eyed early diagnosis of a growing American angst. The magazine’s striking cover literally stitched together foundational promises—“government of the people, by the people,” “life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness”—into the fabric of the flag, then asked whether those promises still hold under the strain of rising crime, political scandal, and economic insecurity.
In his essay, Griffith argued that the original dream had, in many ways, already come true: Liberty extended “from sea to shining sea” and justice is “now more evenly shared, even by minorities.” (Another article in that April 1975 issue, titled “Black America: Still Waiting for Full Membership,” probed this assertion, highlighting the achievements of Black Americans while also pointing out the brutal systemic inequalities they experienced.)
In one of his essay’s sharpest passages, Griffith captures a subtle shift in the American psyche, zeroing in on the moment when a nation built on the promise of abundance discovered its limits: “The newest dent in the American dream of affluence comes from the discovery that our resources (and the world’s) are more finite than we thought,” he wrote. “Americans have always believed that ‘there’s plenty more where that came from’; you don’t divide the wealth, you multiply it. And thus every man’s ambitions—to make, to sell, to buy—somehow can be felt to serve the common good.”
That shift, Griffith wrote, left Americans in a predicament: “If rapid growth is no longer the easy answer to our problems, the alternatives to it are difficult for a nation with an economy so attuned to growth.”
Read half a century later, Griffith’s prescient essay evokes many of today’s anxieties about American stagnation and status loss, and about a society pulled apart by rising economic stratification and hardening ideological divides.
The way forward, Griffith argued, is not imposing ideological or cultural uniformity, but rather in embracing “educated discontent”—and recognizing that there remains some cohesion amid the chaos.
“It is not romantic to insist,” he wrote, “that, though no politician has lately been able to summon it up, there exists beneath all the apparent divisions in this country a latent order, a wish to reach common decisions, an epoxy of spirit that is well called patriotism.”












