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The Red New Deal ebook

Protest poster for a National March for Palestine with anti-genocide messaging

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The Red New Deal ebook

The Red New Deal ebook is a first-hand account of everyday life under real-world socialism in the USSR, from shortages and control to constant restrictions on choice and speech. It contrasts that reality with today’s growing enthusiasm for “free” benefits and pro-socialist ideas in Western democracies.

Drawing on personal stories and concrete examples, the book shows how symbols like the American flag have come to represent a “Go for it and achieve it!” attitude in global liberation movements, and invites readers to think about what that means for their own freedom and future today.

In brief

  • The Red New Deal ebook explores how human development, from access to goods and medicine to cultural freedoms, changes when the state controls everything versus when individual rights and initiative are protected.
  • It contrasts life in the USSR and other socialist systems with modern pro-socialist trends, showing how promises of “free” often hide real costs in media freedom, civic life, and personal opportunity.
  • The ebook is available as a digital edition, so you can buy The Red New Deal ebook online and start reading on your preferred device right away.

What to do

In The Red New Deal ebook, Dmitri Dubograev examines how political and economic systems shape daily life. He describes the USSR he grew up in, with empty shelves, long lines, and constant surveillance, and compares it with societies that protect rights, reward initiative, and allow people to build, create, and speak more freely.

The book also looks at countries that kept socialist structures and media traditions even after some economic rules changed. It explains how state pressure, censorship, and long-standing professional habits can keep journalism from becoming truly independent, and how rewriting history and canceling dissenting views limit honest public debate.

Throughout the ebook, the theme is clear: nothing is really free. The author shows how the American flag appears in liberation movements, including in places like Hong Kong and Taiwan, as a symbol of a “Go for it and achieve it!” spirit, and argues that the real debate over political and economic models is about your freedom and the conditions that let people think, speak, and thrive.

What to keep in mind

The Red New Deal ebook edition is for readers who prefer a digital format and want a grounded, personal look at how freedom of expression, media systems, and economic structures affect everyday life. It focuses on real examples where rights, opportunity, and innovation support human development and cultural vitality, and contrasts them with life under real socialism.

At the same time, the book does not treat all systems as equal. It notes that people around the world rarely seek to immigrate to socialist countries such as Venezuela, Russia, or Belarus, and discusses how state influence and long-standing professional norms have constrained journalism, public debate, and personal choices in the USSR and in modern Russia.

The author stresses that these issues are not abstract theories. As one passage puts it, “Make no mistake, friend, it is. It’s about your freedom.” Readers are encouraged to think critically about political models, media freedom, and the role of the state, and to reflect on how quickly socialist ideas can gain support when people do not understand their true cost.