“…Big parts of the United States are hit by elevated rates of depression (Temin 2016(Temin , 2017, drug addiction, and "deaths of despair" (Case and Deaton 2017), as "good jobs" (often in factories and including pension benefits and health care coverage), ones that could be turned into a career, were destroyed and replaced by insecure, often temporary on-call, freelance, and precarious jobs-euphemistically called "alternative work arrangements" or the "gig economy" Katz and Krueger 2016). 1 In line with all this, recent evidence suggests that the American Dream of intergenerational progress has begun to fade: Children's prospects of earning more than their parents has fallen from 95% for children born in 1940 to less than 50% for children born in the early 1980s (Chetty et al 2016). America is no longer "great," as its economic growth falters, nor "whole" because, as part of the secular stagnation itself, it is becoming a dual economy-two countries, each with vastly different resources, expectations, and potentials, as America's middle class is vanishing (Temin 2017).…”