You’ve Always Needed to Hustle to Make It in America
Workaholism is in our DNA
You’re sick of hustle culture. You’re sick with the American obsession with productivity. You might blame it on a lack of social safety nets, the internet, or rising economic inequality.
Bad news, folks: it’s not an artifact of the internet age, the industrial era, or even remotely new. The idea that you’ve needed to hustle and ruthless to make it in America is simply part of our cultural DNA.
Having a Protestant work ethic was actually written into the law in Massachusetts in 1648: No person shall “spend his time idlely or unprofittably under pain of such punishment as the Court of Assistants or County Court shall think meet to inflict.”
Workaholism was how Pilgrims operated—they believed that God would help those who helped themselves. The Pilgrims came to the new world to propagate religion and build a Christian Utopia based on the Bible’s. Their favored traits were of the “keep your head down and get busy” sort — character, principle, industry, sobriety, and frugality — all of which were based on Christian morals.
Character Building: The Age of Ben Franklin
As parcels of land became divided into increasingly smaller lots and urban areas grew, young men…