Having free spech is very hard when you don't have it on the public square, because there's so many things I want to say and they all get intertwined in my head, so this is where I start.
We are all against censorship here, we need to make real life places to hang out localy, exchange ideas, make new friends and spread the good word of not conforming to the oppression of the intersectional/corporate elite. The first step looks and is very frightening because it means actually opening a comedy club/music shop/book club with a physical adress that could be attacked, or in the case of where I live being harrased by every kind of inspection, high taxes and having to bend the knee to the ones I hate, just so I will be able to spell dissolution of their institutions.
The pitfalls of labeling ideas as dangerous, hate being censored, radicalisation of unwitting members of the audience are very hard to avoid, and the only way to avoid them is having a Q&A after every speech where it makes scence, for example a comedian answering questions about jokes is rediculous, but if you have someone who wants to talk about policy, they need to answer every and any question on the topic if they want to speak.
Also celebrate art and creativity. This is how intersectionals started, but they were radicalised because any moderate was shunned as a heretic to the cause. don't make the same mistake
Here are some ways to make these safe havens of free speech a reality: