They Wanted to Believe A Documentary Novel of Power, Propaganda, and the Erosion of American Democracy This is not a book about a single man, a single election, or a single moment in history. They Wanted to Believe is a documentary novel about how a democracy unravels when belief becomes more powerful than evidence, and when comfort is chosen over responsibility. Written as a narrative examination rather than a partisan argument, it traces how ordinary people, institutions, and media ecosystems slowly normalized what once would have been unthinkable. Blending documented events with reflective storytelling, the book examines how propaganda works not by force, but by invitation. It explores why facts alone rarely change minds, how identity hardens belief, and why democratic erosion is almost always quiet, gradual, and widely rationalized while it is happening. Inside this book, readers will explore: How belief can outlive evidence and even thrive in contradiction - The psychology behind propaganda and mass persuasion - Why democracies rarely fall in a single dramatic collapse - How silence, fatigue, and disengagement become political forces - The role of ordinary citizens in either sustaining or surrendering freedom - Why “non-partisan” does not mean “neutral,” but morally awake This is not a call to outrage. It is a call to attention. They Wanted to Believe invites readers to think, discuss, and participate. Democracy has never been saved by passive agreement. It survives only when people remain engaged, curious, and willing to examine their own assumptions. Read it. Talk about it. Share it. Invisible books do not change history. Engaged readers do.