America was the country of tomorrow, a place people would travel to live out their dreams, to replace their tomorrows with a better one. The country spoke of frontiers, pioneers, economic strength, civil rights and an abundance of promises. The future was not always fairly distributed, nor was it ever innocent. For many Americans, the old dream encompassed exclusion and violence. And yet there was still a public perception of progress. The politicians knew how to navigate change and shine a light on the path forward.
Yet today, American politics seems less certain that tomorrow exists. Americans seem to sigh with every flip of the calendar. The dominant mood is not excited anticipation for the day ahead but exhaustion. One party promises restoration, and the other preservation. One side says the nation must be made great once more, and the other warns that democracy must be saved from innate collapse. Both are responding to very real anxieties that threaten the United States, but neither seems to speak of progress. The political imagination has narrowed from striding forward to frantically fixing past mistakes. The once land of prosperity is turning away from the world and its own people.
Furthermore, this feeling is measurable. In May 2026, Pew Research Centre reported that 59% of Americans believe the country’s best years are behind it, while only 40% think they lie ahead. When surveyed in imagining the United States 50 years from now, 44% of American citizens were more pessimistic in comparison to the 28% of optimistic viewpoints. As the nation approaches its 250th anniversary, its cracks are beginning to widen, and the future looks more unpredictable than ever.
So, who stole the future?
A simple reply would be to blame economics. Many young Americans cannot see into next week as rent prices are beyond reach, and home ownership seems like a dream. The housing crisis is not just about property prices, but represents the collapse of the life sequence the country once knew. People just aren’t able to look to the future because there is no optimistic path towards it anymore.
Research from the Harvard Joint Centre for Housing Studies found that in 2023, half of all U.S. renters, 22.6 million households, were cost-burdened, meaning they are spending more than 30% of their monthly income on housing. The same report found that 65% of working-age renters did not have enough left after housing costs to cover their daily necessities like food and healthcare.
The depressing reality is that not many people can escape, and with the current climate, it’s only set to worsen. We praise the West for individuality; for encouraging people to follow their dreams, choose their own path in life and in doing so are told they will be successful. However, the young are growing up and realizing that this mantra is bittersweet. They cannot choose their path; instead, the path is chosen for them, and it is one with no prospective ending.
Politics seems to sanitise this reality with the language of abstraction. After all the bills, debts, and compromises have been gathered under one umbrella term, they become easier to discuss and simpler to forget. That word- precarity is a useful one, but it can become too clean. In practice, it means the future is eaten. Salaries disappear into insurance, transport, groceries, and rent, while those who struggle feel the quiet humiliation of doing everything right but still feeling like they’re behind everyone else. America’s future was never stolen all at once, but instead is direct-debited.
Politics seems to sanitise this reality with the language of abstraction. After all the bills, debts, delays, and compromises have been gathered into a single term, they become easier to discuss and easier to forget. Precarity is a useful word, but it can become too clean. In practice, it means the future is eaten.
The country’s debt only deepens the theft. The Federal Reserve Bank of New York reported that total US household debt has reached $18.8 trillion in the first quarter of 2026, whilst student loan balances stood at about $1.66 trillion. On top of this, student loan delinquency has also risen, with a 10.3% total of balances being 90 or more days delinquent. The Federal Reserve’s own household well-being reported that amongst borrowers with outstanding student loans for their own education, around 20% were reported behind on their payments in 2024.
These figures matter because debt not only impacts spending. It holds discipline over imagination and individuality. A person constantly anxious about loans, repayments, covering rent, and experiencing health problems, is not naturally inclined towards utopian politics. They move towards survival politics. Their horizon strength by the day, and the question then becomes not “what kind of society should exist,” but “how do I get through the next bill cycle without it impacting my credit score?” A democracy full of people living within this stressful environment will undoubtedly struggle to think expansively towards the future.
Though economics alone do not explain the public atmosphere. America has endured plenty of turbulence before and managed to produce ambitious political solutions. The deeper crisis is imaginative- whereby the future has not only become materially inaccessible, but it has become ideologically unrealistic.
Mark Fisher’s idea of capitalist realism becomes useful for breaking down this problem. Fisher describes a culture in which capitalism shows itself, not simply as the preferable option, but as the only system available. The slogan beneath the age is not “this is good,” but defines the brand as if there is no other alternative. The distinction is important as people do not need to believe the system is working in order to remain trapped within it. People only need to believe that nothing more can be built.
And the people are not unaware of their reality by any means. America’s politics is essentially at a cliff edge. The Harvard Youth Poll survey released in April 2026 found that half of 18 to 19-year-olds surveyed said they feel they have no real say in government, highlighting that trust in the federal government is at a measly 15%.
The statistics should terrify anyone who still believes in democracy. Voting can survive on low trust for a while; however, democratic imagination cannot thrive when people feel structurally immobile. A citizen who feels unheard may still contribute to the ballot, protest on the streets, and post online. However, future political relationships do not build on superior grounds, but rather on objecting to a script set in stone.
America’s crisis is not just its divided people or its brutal economic climate. It seems the country has forgotten how to imagine collectively. A democracy without a future does not move forward. It lingers and circles its own memory, replacing direction with repetition. If American politics aims to become more than a patchwork emergency management, it must recover the courage to not dwell on what needs saving, but also on what needs development.
