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OverviewAmerica Is a Third World Country is not a slogan. It is a diagnosis. Despite unprecedented wealth, technological power, and global influence, the United States increasingly exhibits the defining traits of a developing nation: failing infrastructure, unaffordable healthcare, mass incarceration, political theater without accountability, extreme inequality, and institutions that extract rather than serve. This book argues that these failures are not accidental-and not temporary. They are structural. Drawing on political economy, development theory, comparative governance, and lived American reality, America Is a Third World Country dismantles the comforting myths that prevent honest reckoning: that GDP reflects wellbeing, that markets are moral, that billionaires are heroes, that elections guarantee accountability, and that America's problems are inevitable or uniquely complex. Chapter by chapter, the book exposes how the country's wealth masks systemic decay. It explains why Americans pay more for worse healthcare, why housing functions as extraction rather than shelter, why work no longer guarantees dignity, why media informs without educating, and why political polarization is engineered to block reform rather than resolve it. It shows how financialization hollowed out the productive economy, how the carceral state replaced opportunity, and how learned helplessness became the emotional equilibrium of decline. This is not a partisan book. It is not an ideological manifesto. And it is not a call for despair. It is a clear-eyed examination of why a country that insists it is the greatest on Earth increasingly fails at the basics of modern life-and why denial, not scarcity, is the greatest obstacle to recovery. Unlike books that promise easy fixes or romantic revolutions, America Is a Third World Country insists on something harder: honesty. It argues that real reform requires institutional redesign, public ownership where markets fail, radical transparency, and the abandonment of myths that can no longer be sustained. The book culminates in a stark choice facing the United States: continue managing decline quietly, or undertake deliberate rebuilding while the capacity to do so still exists. This book is for readers who: Feel the system is broken but are tired of slogans Sense decline but want clarity, not culture war Are done being told ""this is just how it is"" Want to understand why everything feels expensive, hollow, and unstable A country that cannot name its condition cannot cure it. This book names it-plainly, rigorously, and without illusion. Full Product DetailsAuthor: Dexter DowPublisher: Independently Published Imprint: Independently Published Dimensions: Width: 15.20cm , Height: 1.30cm , Length: 22.90cm Weight: 0.336kg ISBN: 9798245590677Pages: 248 Publication Date: 25 January 2026 Audience: General/trade , General Format: Paperback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: Available To Order We have confirmation that this item is in stock with the supplier. It will be ordered in for you and dispatched immediately. Table of ContentsReviewsAuthor InformationTab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |
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