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The Red New Deal Kindle

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What this page covers

The Red New Deal Kindle edition brings Dmitri I. Dubograev’s first-hand account of life under real-world socialism in the USSR straight to your digital library. He contrasts everyday shortages, control, and restrictions with today’s growing pro-socialist trends in Western democracies.

Drawing on personal stories and sharp observations, Dubograev shows how promises of free benefits often hide real costs to personal freedom, free speech, and independent thought. He connects Soviet-era practices like history rewriting and censorship to modern cancel culture and political messaging.

The Kindle format makes it easy to explore how quickly socialist ideas gain support when people do not understand their price. You can read how young people in the USSR navigated daily life, and compare those experiences with current debates about what government should provide and what that means for individual liberty.

What to choose

  • See how Dubograev compares daily life in the USSR with modern political trends, from food lines and shortages to today’s expectations that government will provide more and more for free.
  • Explore stories that reveal how censorship, propaganda, and history rewriting worked in the Soviet Union, and how similar patterns can appear in modern media and cancel culture.
  • Examine the book’s warning that when everything is promised as free, citizens themselves can become the price, paying with their privacy, choices, and long-term freedom.

Where to go next

Use the pages below to dive deeper into The Red New Deal, from background on Dmitri Dubograev to details about the Kindle edition and what readers are saying. Each section highlights a different angle on the book’s comparison of Soviet socialism with today’s trends.

Whether you want more context on life in the USSR, examples of how modern politics can repeat old mistakes, or focused reviews, the child pages help you go straight to the information most relevant to your interests.

What matters

  • Dubograev shares concrete memories of growing up under Soviet socialism, including constant shortages, rigid controls, and limits on travel and speech, to show what a fully centralized system looks like in practice.
  • The book connects these experiences to current debates in the US and other democracies, arguing that attractive promises of free services can slowly expand state power and shrink personal freedom if people ignore the tradeoffs.
  • By comparing Soviet-era propaganda, history rewriting, and social pressure with modern cancel culture and political messaging, Dubograev encourages readers to think critically about what they might be giving up in exchange for the idea of free.