Yep, to counter the congenital class & race bigotry ingrained in America, and to give the working, lower middle and even some of the middle class a shot at a decent life. Here are the current benefits to all Americans (that includes you) from the New Deal:
www.livingnewdeal.org/why-the-new-deal-still-matters-today/
Currently, your Cheeto Jeezus has done a similar SCOTUS packing to systematically undo the New Deal. Maybe you should do some honest research as to how life was for Americans (including you) previous to its enaction.
Well, lets see... From your link:
The New Deal built the three pillars of modern government in the United States. The first is Social Security
Social Security isn't a retirement plan. It's crumbs for the stupid and lazy. People that actually had real jobs and careers get retirement plans, 401K's, IRA's and save some money. Sure, if you spend your life being a barista at Starbucks or a fry cook at Micky D's, Social Security may be all you get, but that's on you and your problem, nobody else's.
One grandkid that's already in a trade and working has a 401K, a big savings account, and is doing well. If he keeps that up, he'll have a comfortable retirement decades from now--No Social Security needed.
As retirement plans go, social security sucks. The ROI on it is nonexistent. That alone argues that it was devised and run by idiots.
The second pillar is Workers Rights.
Henry Ford was the progenitor of the 40 hour work week, not Unions, not the government, not the Left. Ford wanted his employees to have a reasonable work week and paid them sufficiently to buy one of his cars. That's smart capitalism at work, not Leftist politics. All FDR did was codify what was already being widely practiced by industry.
Unions are another problematic issue. Yes, there are times and places where unions are a necessity but on the whole, they are a net negative for workers. Today, unions get about 6% better pay than non-union workers. Dues eat up virtually all of that difference. Unions play politics that as much as half their members disagree with. The union is often corrupt to one degree or another. Unions often call arbitrary strikes and fight managers and owners over the most trivial bullshit.
Many unions also don't try to improve worker skills, flexibility, or encourage promotion. Doing this means they are likely to lose the member as they grow and rise in position.
On the whole, that's why unions today are in serious decline. They contribute little or nothing to improving worker's lives and often make them worse.
The third pillar is public investment.
This is a mixed bag. Government
can contribute, but often it is the capitalist that does such things. The Carnage Libraries for example. The US railroad system was privately owned, and most of it still is. Yes, the government builds roads, but often it is private capitalists who put in the infrastructure then hand it over to government to operate in return for a tax break on the profits they make from developing land.
Then there's this dreck:
"...a time of deep despair and loss of faith in democratic government. In Europe that led to fascism,"
This shows the author of that piece is an historical illiterate. Fascism in Germany, the usual case held up as an example, was born out of brutal revenge, particularly by France, for WW 1. France and Britain wrecked the German economy with forced, massive, reparations for that war. The French, in particular, then squandered much of that on socialist programs that were utter and complete failures.
Spain and Italy were faced with serious radical Leftist, communist, uprisings which fascism offered a more palatable, nationalist, alternative. If anything, socialism and Leftist governments of the 20's and 30's in Europe caused much of the economic disasters that befell that region of the world.