“From a master’s hand, wall-to-wall argument not limited to the cranium but invigorating our conscience as well. This erudite book is destined for the classics, in the legacy of de Tocqueville’s <i>Democracy in America</i>, John Dewey’s <i>The Public and Its Problems</i>, and Hannah Arendt’s <i>The Human Condition</i>. High-energy ideas on another order of magnitude, taking public life back from corporate ideology and re-creating it with discourse democracy instead."--Clifford G. Christians, author of <i>Media Ethics and Global Justice in the Digital Age</i>
"<i>Democracy, Inc.</i> is an important and illuminating book. In an approach entirely consistent with his theory, Allen presents a clearly reasoned argument in place of table-pounding denunciations of the corporatization of the press and law. He attributes the problems of democracy neither to conspiracies nor to unbridled greed, but to the structure of a particular brand of capitalism whose modes of support he clearly identifies in law, making clear the route to real reforms in the process."--Thomas Streeter, author of <i>Selling the Air: A Critique of the Policy of Commercial Broadcasting in the United States</i>