Which raises the obvious question of why. I'm reminded of this quote from Ronald Wright (about whom I know nothing else): "Socialism never took root in America because the poor see themselves not as an exploited proletariat but as temporarily embarrassed millionaires." Which is to say the marketing of the American Dream has been so successful that any failure to achieve it seems to be seen as the fault of the person themselves rather than any external factors. I mean, I'm sure I've seen somewhere that even lowly paid people don't like the idea of raising income taxes on the wealthiest Americans because they can so vividly see themselves belonging to that class at some point in the future.
That pretty much hits the nail on the head. There's an even shorter answer that says what you've formulated here, but in a very quotable form: Americans are terrified of the S-word -- socialism.
I'm a little unclear what argument (if any) is being made with the Ronald Wright quote.
Is the idea that people in the US should support more socialistic policies, because it is in their self-interest to do so?
G'day Luther
My understanding of the way the quote is intended is this:
The American Dream is a concept of the way Americans achieve success. You work hard, you take responsibility for your actions, the government keeps the heck out of the way, and by the end of your life you're in a much better place than when you started. If you have exceptional skills, strength, intelligence or an eye for taking advantage of the opportunities that are available to you (or some combination) then even someone starting in penury can end up as a millionaire.
This view is constantly repeated in all sorts of media, whether books, movies, newspapers or TV - the rags to riches stories of musicians, entrepreneurs, sports stars or whoever (and, FWIW, even the trashy displays of wealth by black rap stars feed into that image, even if white middle class Americans despise or vaguely fear blacks). And because these stories are true, and are going to happen to
some people in a country with a population as large as the USA - the reality of the American Dream is reinforced.
So when people look at millionaires, they don't see a separate and privileged group of people, they see what they expect themselves to be some time in the future.
Incidentally, this view is also reinforced by the marketing of millionaires as People Who Are Just Like You. I forget which of those self-help books specifically mentioned it (
How To Win Friends And Influence People, or
Think And Grow Rich - those sorts of books) but at least one has a section which talks about how many rich people still drive around in ordinary cars and live in ordinary houses and use those discount dockets to save money, and so on. Think about how that plays out in the minds of ordinary Americans when they're shopping at Walmart -
for all I know that casually dressed Joe who parked his battered old pick-up next to me could be one of those millionaires...
Therefore any attempt to extract a little more tax from millionaires today can be interpreted as an attack on the group of people they imminently expect to be joining, and thus an attack on themselves.
The reality, of course, is that the best indicator of being a millionaire in America is to be the child of a millionaire. Social mobility in the USA is lower than in most developed countries. That is, the reality is that the American Dream these days is largely a myth. Yet its marketing is so successful that people think it's still real - real enough that anyone wanting to oppose a policy only needs to hint that it runs counter to the American Dream and the very people who would benefit from it will reflexively oppose it.
So your counter-rhetorical point that
socialism is a great way to make money is pushing against a very potent myth: that this money socialism will
supposedly * allow you to make is coming out of the pockets of the people you will in reality be shortly joining - the ranks of the millionaires.
* Because any policy can also be criticised before it's implemented on the grounds that it won't work as advertised. In this regard it follows the path often followed by critics of an idea - using two arguments against an idea which contradict each other but which are presented as being actually complementary:
X policy shouldn't be implemented because it won't help the poor, and
X policy shouldn't be implemented because it will harm you. As long as the critics can convince you that you aren't actually poor, then these two arguments appear to complement each other. But if the reality is that you
are poor, then you've just been convinced to oppose a policy which would help you.
ETA: A good example of this is the tax cuts that Trump and Congress passed a couple of years ago. My understanding is that the greatest amount of financial benefit went to the rich. Yet they have been largely supported by Trump's base because of the logic chain that tax cuts for the rich encourage business investment, allowing businesses to expand and offer wage rises to workers, so the workers benefit as well.
And the reality is that there
were wage rises for ordinary Americans following the tax cuts. But if I remember the figures correctly, the amount of tax-cut money passed on as wage rises was something like 6% of the value of the tax cuts. A lot also went to wage rises for the rich. But most of this money has been spent by companies buying up their own shares. And the result of this? All that purchasing pushes up share prices. And this in turn increases the value of the share portfolios of the executives and making their share options more valuable. Plus it artificially inflates the stock market indexes which Trump uses as the indicator that the American economy is booming in his Presidency.
So the reality is that Trump's base of ordinary workers have been convinced to support a policy which delivered small benefits to them but much larger benefits to the rich. And the cost of the tax-cuts have been met out of the American government's tax base, which means a bigger deficit, just at the time that the stock market is growing in an unsustainable bubble.
It's hard to see how this can be resolved in any way other than
ugly, and that it will be at the expense of ordinary Americans, not the rich.