Ellen Brown: Critique continued
Displaying Matches 17 thru 31 of 31 Found. FIRSTBACK
Ellen Brown thinks that when Lincon said "no," he really meant "yes."... keep reading
Lawyer Brown does not understand economics. She looks only at the law and then ignores people' behavior.... keep reading
Ellen Brown uses this argument again and again. Are you impressed?... keep reading
Ellen Brown promises to revise her book's next edition.... keep reading
Ellen Brown says she will remove the quote from her next edition.... keep reading
I originally pointed out that Ellen Brown offered no statistical proof regarding the inflation-free island of Guernsey. She has yet to offer any.... keep reading
Ellen Brown is a Left-winger. Nowhere is this clearer than in her support from the 19th-century radical political movement known as Populism.... keep reading
Ellen Brown says she never really said this document was true. Not really. Just sort of, maybe a little bit. She skips over the fact that she openly promoted its 1934 "update," as she called it.... keep reading
Ellen Brown continues to rely on Matthew Josephson, a 1920s literary critic who hated capitalism and defended Stalin in the 1930s. She dismisses modern pro-capitalist accounts of American enterprise.... keep reading
Ellen Brown tries mightily to deal with the fact that she failed to check Benjamin's Strong's date of death: 1928.... keep reading
Ellen Brown says that Milton Friedman taught that the Federal Reserve caused the Great Depression by contracting the money supply, 1930-33. He never said this.... keep reading
Ellen Brown tries to distinguish between Hitler's economic policy and his political policy. She continues to defend his economic policy.... keep reading
Ellen Brown quotes verbatim from two experts who conform my position. She insists that these sources are accurate.... keep reading
Ellen Brown says that international currency speculators caused Zimbabwe's inflation. She has provided a single expert to present this thesis: the central bank of Zimbabwe.... keep reading
Ellen Brown is not interested in the details of history. Dates are irrelevant for her. It's the thought that counts, I guess.... keep reading