Reviewing Michael Parenti's "Democracy For the Few" - by Stephen Lendman
they, a. the, a. they, abraham lincoln, adam smith, african american, america, american indian movement, big bill haywood, big oil, black panther, bush doctrine, business, chief supreme court, civil war, constitutional convention, corporate, corporate state, czarist russia, democracy, democracy for, dirty secrets, eight amendment, electoral college, eugene debs, federal reserve, federal reserve system, first amendment, for whom, fred hampton, general electric, george bush, george w. bush, gerald ford, geronimo pratt, government, great society, gulag prison system, hartley act, high court, high courts, human services, in america, in iraq, indian citizenship act, industrial workers, information hour, interests, jack abramoff, jack kennedy, japanese americans, john adams, john jay, john kennedy, justice breyer, justice stevens, korean war, left out, legal tender act, leonard peltier, lyndon johnson, madison avenue, michael harrington, mumia abu, nation, national labor relations board, national recovery act, native americans, net neutrality, new deal, news corporation, noam chomsky, on june, parenti, paul krugman, philadelphia state house, political repression, power, public, ralph nader, richard nixon, roberts court, ronald reagan, rupert murdock, sedition acts, smith act, social, social security, southern jim crow, supreme court, teddy roosevelt, they're, time warner, united states, voting rights acts, wagner act, wall street, white house, william howard taft, woodrow wilson, world trade organization