Who we help

What this page covers
This Who we help hub is for readers, educators, and discussion leaders who are drawn to The Red New Deal’s focus on free speech, censorship, and how “truth” is managed in public life.
If you are thinking about disinformation, state power, civil liberties, or lessons from past regimes, you can use this page to find the profile that best fits your role or situation.
Scan the list of person types below and pick the one closest to how you read, teach, or host conversations so you can go straight to tailored ideas for using the book.
What to choose
- You are worried about growing collusion between state power and tech platforms and want to understand how it can threaten civil liberties and open debate.
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- You guide students or groups through questions about propaganda, “misinformation,” and how truth should emerge from public discussion.
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Where to go next
Below you will find profiles for different kinds of readers who are thinking about civil liberties, state power, cancel culture, and the new “disinformation” regime.
Choose the person or situation type that best matches how you read, teach, or lead conversations to see focused guidance for using The Red New Deal.
What matters
- The Red New Deal is based on lived experience under a system where criticism of leaders was punished and speech was tightly controlled, showing how quickly freedoms can disappear when the state polices “truth.
- By comparing everyday life in the USSR with modern pro‑socialist trends, the book reveals the hidden cost of promises that everything will be free and how control over speech shapes what people are allowed to believe.
- If you see these patterns emerging today and want a clear, first‑hand account to share with students, family, or discussion groups, choose the profile that fits you and then get the book in the format that works best for you.
