Trump’s proposal to seed every eligible newborn with a $1,000 investment account instantly split the country into two camps:
those who saw a lifeline, and those who saw a ticking time bomb.
For working-class parents with no spare dollar to invest, the idea of the government building a nest egg from day one felt revolutionary, almost unreal.
If markets rose steadily over decades, that modest deposit could compound into meaningful savings for college, a
first home, or retirement—wealth that many families have never had a chance to touch.
Yet beneath the excitement, unease runs deep. Tying a child’s future cushion to Wall Street exposes that promise to crashes, bubbles, and political meddling.
Who manages the money, who pays the bill, and what happens if Congress changes course halfway through?
The plan forces a stark question: is America ready to treat wealth-building as a public right, not a private privilege, even if the outcome is uncertain?

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