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In our own minds, we usually place ourselves in the social class in which we were raised.
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For me, like many Americans, that means "middle class".
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But the truth is that the social classes in the United States are rapidly pulling away from one another.
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The emerging class system looks different, with its casual dress codes and somewhat greater variety of skin tones and ethnicities.
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But we are the accomplices in a process that is strangling the economy, destabilizing our politics, and eroding democracy.
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There is a familiar story about rising inequality in the United States.
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The villains are the plutocrats, the fat cats, the tech bros and the rest of the so-called 1%.
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The good guys are the 99 percent, also known as "the people".
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In fact, it is the top 0.1% who have been the big winners in wealth over the past 50 years.
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Their share of the pie climbed from 10 percent in 1963 to more than 22 percent today.
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But not everybody below them had to give up something.
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Only the bottom 90% did.
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In between, there is a third group that has held on to its share of the wealth year after year.
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Let's call it the 9.9%.
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The 9.9% is rich in more than mere money.
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It has substantially lower rates of heart disease, diabetes, and obesity.
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It marries later and has more stable family structures.
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It lives in gilded neighborhoods with richer social networks and vastly better educational opportunities.
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And it is able to pass all of this along to its offspring, leaving the bottom 90% in the dust.
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We like to pretend that none of this matters because in the land of opportunity, everybody has a chance to make it.
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But in fact, social mobility is lower here than in many other developed countries, and it's been going down.
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Aristocrats take wealth out of productive activities and invest it in walls.
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They lock themselves and their offspring in place at the expense of other people's children.
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The escalating inequality of our time appears new.
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But if you take in a broad sweep of history, starting, say, with the Great Pyramids of Egypt, inequality looks like the norm of human experience.
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History tells us that aristocrats come to believe their own propaganda, that their superiority is an artifact of nature.
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Today's 9.9 percent has convinced themselves they don't have any privileges, and the delusions are understandable.
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A strange truth about rising inequality is that even as it locks our privileges in place, it doesn't seem to make things that much easier.
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That's because the greater the inequality, the less your money buys.
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Our insecurity grows as the chasm beneath us expands.
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Rising inequality leads to political instability and typically ends in catastrophic violence.
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Still, there have been exceptions.
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America's founders were mostly 9.9 percenters.
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But they turned their backs on the man at the top in order to create a government of, by, and for the people.
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Reversing the calcifying effects of rising inequality isn't just a matter of helping out the less fortunate.
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The challenge we face now is to renew the promise of American democracy.