The Atlantic

The Perils of Meritocracy

It’s one of the most loved ideas in American life. Perhaps, though, it should be one of the most resented.
Source: Suzanne Plunkett / Reuters

American culture nurtures many myths about the moral value of hard work. The phrase “by the bootstraps,” still widely used to describe those Americans who have found success through a combination of dogged work and stubborn will, rose from a mis-remembering of : In it, the eponymous aristocrat pulls himself from a swamp—. And Horatio Alger’s stories, as well, while often remembered collectively as the prototypical tale of American rags to American riches, romanticized not just the social and economic power of hard work, but: “I’d like it if some rich man would adopt me, and give me plenty to eat and drink and wear, without my havin’ to look so sharp after it.”)

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