Ellen Brown: Critique continued
- Article Dates:
- 2010
- All Months
Displaying Matches 1 thru 16 of 33 Found. NEXTLAST
Ellen Brown has reaffirmed her defection to the FED's camp. She says that was always her intention.... keep reading
Ellen Brown is a lawyer. She has just settled out of court with Bernanke. Are you surprised?... keep reading
Ellen Brown is desperate. Let me show you just how desperate.... keep reading
Ellen Brown says it does not matter how accurate a quote is, just so long as somebody has quoted it.... keep reading
Quoting yourself without additional evidence is not an effective response to a charge that you refused to quote the whole document.... keep reading
This is a major retreat on Ellen Brown's part. She has almost abandoned the #1 historical myth of the Greenbacker movement.... keep reading
Ellen Brown is a lawyer. In public debate, she is not a good lawyer. She doesn't think the "jury" -- you -- can read.... keep reading
Ellen Brown used a bogus quote for three years. Then she dropped it and rewrote those sections of her book that relied on it. Why did she use it in the first place?... keep reading
When caught in a whopper of a mistake, an author should either fess up or shut up. Ellen Brown does neither.... keep reading
Ellenm Brown thinks that primary source documents are irrelevant for historical research.... keep reading
With or without my adjective, she was wrong.... keep reading
Ellen Brown says that fiat paper money does not produce mass inflation, except when it does, and when it did in Medieval China, the result was prosperity. No, it wasn't. It was collapse.... keep reading
Ellen Brown defines "fiat money" in the way that an economist defines commodity money. I ask: "Why does someone write a book promoting fiat money who defines fiat money as commodity money?"... keep reading
Why Ellen Brown thinks this is a response baffles me. She offered no evidence that the bogus quote was in fact real.... keep reading
A reader tipped her off in 2010. After three editions and three years, she has dropped it. This is the first time her original readers have heard about this revision.... keep reading
Ellen Brown quotes selectively from her own book. Twice, she gets Jefferson's influence wrong: in 1791 and in 1811.... keep reading