Checks out. I could barely make it past the first paragraphs.

"Like very few Americans of my generation, I come from the physical world. ...earning a living from things I could touch and smell."

What is the majority of the workforce doing, then? People working in fast food, welders, plumbers, carpenters, laborers, people working in slaughterhouses, janitors, cooks, waitstaff, the people working at the grocery store and gas station, people that stay at home and take care of their children? All of them are demoted from reality? Can't touch or smell any of that? Poor struggles in the city don't count?

I forced myself through several more paragraphs before I let myself post, but could barely keep my rolling eyes on the text. "We, we, we..." We were the toughest, the hardest, the roughest. The unstated implication being that the rest of us soft, inner-city, fake Americans could never relate to the realness. Blah, blah, blah. How about some humility, things have been pretty tough and unfair and extreme and real for a lot of people in a lot of places. People have real relationships and peculiarities wherever they might live.

I don't know, maybe the article goes further than that, but I couldn't force any more of it down.

Wholeheartedly agree. As an American, I get SO tired of the "rugged American individual" narrative...