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We Could Be: A Tale of Trump's America

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Welcome to Trump's America. The year is 2036 and America is great again.

Steve Price leads a good life. Sure, keeping food on the table is tough when a bottle of ketchup costs $300,000, and he lives in fear that his son or coworkers will report him for being unmutual, but at least he has a job and a roof over his head, which is a major accomplishment these days.

But the price of a comfortable life in Trump's America is keeping your eyes and mouth shut. After his neighbors are arrested by Homeland Security, Steve starts to wonder if that's a deal he can live with. But does he have the guts to stand up to the MAGA regime?

32 pages, Kindle Edition

Published December 25, 2016

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About the author

Sean O'Hara

23 books100 followers
Sean O’Hara was born in Stuttgart, West Germany during the last years of the Cold War. Both his parents served in the US Army, though his mother took an honorable discharge after his birth. His family moved to Fort Clayton, Panama in 1982, and they were still there when World War III broke out two years later. His mother, still a reservist, returned to active service during the Soviet-Cuban invasion of Panama, and died during the Battle of Darien. His father was reported missing in action after the fall of the Canal Zone, and none of the surviving Soviet records list him as a prisoner of war.

Sean himself escaped to Colombia thanks to Ruth Lyle, the Panamanian wife of his neighbor who smuggled him across the border. Sean spent the next several years in a refugee camp before being repatriated to the US at the end of the war. After a rigorous three year course in the Eugene V. Debs Education Center for the Rehabilitation of Politically Suspect Children, he entered Victor Berger High School in New Leningrad, Wisconsin where he excelled in Political Theory and Neo-Hegelian Historical Analysis. After fulfilling his three years of National Service, Sean enrolled at Emma Goldman University in Chicago where he took a bachelor’s degree in Political Doctrine with a minor in Collectivist History.

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