You're not acknowledging that you're using the word "progressive" but what you really mean is "hedonist".
I think that claim of "hedonism" is nothing but a bizarre confection of your own devising; it appears to stink of quasi-religious sexual puritanism. It is also ill-considered on various levels:
1) How much does any complaint of "hedonism" have meaning in a country that stated in defence of its independence a right "inherent and inalienable" of "the pursuit of happiness"?
2) What sense does the claim of "hedonism" make given extensive arguments based in human rights, personal freedoms, human development and economics argued just in the last few weeks?
3) Why the selectivity of this accusation, given all the pleasure-seeking activities which infict forms of harm that we could consider under our consumerist society?
I mean, a well documented lie is still a lie. There is lots of documentation implying Americans are unable to get health care, but it's not accurate. There are lots of opinion surveys and proxy variables used to justify such a claim, but the actual numbers aren't there.
So your argument is that virtually all the statistics and evidence points to the US healthcare system being both grossly inefficient and for much of the population inadequate, but it's just a "lie" because...
you say so?
The statistic for social mobility does not measure what you want it to. That is what I'm arguing. That in order for the bottom % of people to escape the bottom %, others necessarily must fall to replace them. Economics is not a zero sum game, but social mobility measures are, which makes them not a reflection of anything meaningful.
Er... wtf?
Economics indeed is not a zero sum game. However, that argument exists within a certain context, usually the fact that trade is mutually beneficial, or that the economy is not static can can grow, thus everyone can theoretically benefit.
However, it bares no meaningful relation to the reality of job scarcity.
There are only so many jobs that pay more than $1 million a year (2021 dollars). It may fluctuate and should very gradually increase over time, but not that much. And I am willing to bet you that at any one time, the pool of people wanting jobs that pay $1million p.a. is vastly higher than the number of those jobs. So most of them have to settle for jobs paying less. And so on down the ladder until you get people mopping up shit (maybe literally) on the minimum wage - or if they're exploitable enough, less.
One would expect that in a world of perfect equality of opportunity and merit-based advancement, the chances of a child of poor parents to get a job paying $1 million year (or $100,000, or $50,000 or $20,000) to be roughly the same as a child of wealthy parents. But it isn't the case, or even close in the USA. And yet in a country in like Denmark, it is far more likely for that to occur. In other words, being born to a wealthy family affords massive advantages, or being poor grants huge disadvantages.
It's not hard to realise how resources provide advantages, and the lack of them disadvantages. Other countries do more to compensate for poverty, so by and large, their poor are less disadvantaged. It's not rocket science.
Arguing about actual rises in income is better, but bragging that people in the UK were poor 40 years ago is not a good look.
That is beyond pathetic. I feel embarrassed for you.