Personal freedom and democracy both peaked about thirty years ago in the US -- since then there has been a retrenchment as the oligarchy has advanced the freedom to amass infinite wealth at the expense of all others freedoms.
After decades of corporate bribery and jeremiads by Cato, Heritage, the WSJ and the other organs of the GOP, the US now emphasizes the type of freedom embodied by the statement "all are equal before the law: rich and poor alike are prohibited from sleeping under bridges."
In terms of civil liberties, rights of expression and assembly, press freedom, workers' freedom to organize, etc, we typically rank somewhere in the mid to high teens, behind the usual suspect more freed countries: Sweden, Norway, Denmark, Switzerland, Great Britain, Canada, Australia, Germany, and the various small fry (Benelux, etc).
In terms of effective freedom, taking into consideration the realities of inequality and social mobility and their suppression of personal flourishing, we are down in the 30s behind almost the entire developed world. We are a great country to be rich in. Poor? Not so much. Better than the undeveloped world certainly, so we'll continue to attract tidal waves of immigrants. But if it weren't for age, the language barrier and other practical considerations there are a dozen countries I'd be prouder to call home.