On Fri, Sep 4, 2009 at 10:53 AM, Sam <[email protected]> wrote:

>
> On Fri, Sep 4, 2009 at 8:47 AM, Larry C. Lyons<[email protected]>
> wrote:
> >
> > Here are a few things he definitely lied about and called it news:
> >
> > 1. "It has not been proven that nicotine is addictive, the same with
> > cigarettes causing emphysema [and other diseases]." (Radio show,
> > 4/29/94)
>
> That statement was true in 1994
>

nonsense.  As someone  involved with the RJ Reynolds  discovery,  I can
assure you that even the tobacco companies knew it for a fact long before
1994.


> > 2. LIMBAUGH: On the Republicans' "Contract With America": "The New
> > York Times never ran anything on the contract 'til after the election.
> > The rest of the news media hardly talked about it at all." (TV,
> > 4/6/95)
> >
> > REALITY: In the 42 days between the announcement of the "Contract with
> > America" and the Nov. 8, 1994 election, the New York Times published
> > 45 articles that mentioned the contract--more than one a day. The
> > Nexis computer database reports that more than 1400 pieces mentioning
> > the contract were published before the election.
>
> WOW that's huge. I'm guessing in was in the living section but how do
> I check? I can't afford Nexis-Lexus.
>

Google?


>
> > 3. LIMBAUGH: "Banks take the risks in issuing student loans and they
> > are entitled to the profits." (Radio show, quoted in FRQ, Summer/93)
> >
> > REALITY: Banks take no risks in issuing student loans, which are
> > federally insured.
>
> Federally insured loans are, but are all student loans federally
> insured? Look into that and get back to me :)
>

I guess, theoretically you could borrow money in the private market and
promise to start making payments in six years... look into that and let me
know?


>
> > 4. LIMBAUGH: Comparing the 1950s with the present: "And I might point
> > out that poverty and economic disparities between the lower and upper
> > classes were greater during the former period." (Told You So, p. 84)
> >
> > REALITY: Income inequality, as measured by the U.S. Census Bureau,
> > fell from the 1940s to the late 1960s, and then began rising.
> > Inequality surpassed the 1950 level in 1982 and rose steadily to
> > all-time highs in 1992. (Census Bureau's "Money Income of Households,
> > Families and Persons in the United States")
>
> Out of context but I'm guessing he saying people aren't starving in
> the streets now and most have big screens and I think all have at
> least one TV.
>

how does this translate to income quality, please?


>
> > 5. LIMBAUGH: "Oh, how they relished blaming Reagan administration
> > policies, including the mythical reductions in HUD's budget for public
> > housing, for creating all of the homeless! Budget cuts? There were no
> > budget cuts! The budget figures show that actual construction of
> > public housing increased during the Reagan years." (Ought to Be, p.
> > 242-243)
> >
> > REALITY: In 1980, 20,900 low-income public housing units were under
> > construction; in 1988, 9,700, a decline of 54 percent ;Statistical
> > Abstracts of the U.S).In terms of 1993 dollars, the HUD budget for the
> > construction of new public housing was slashed from $6.3 billion in
> > 1980 to $683 million in 1988. "We're getting out of the housing
> > business. Period," a Reagan HUD official declared in 1985.
>
> http://www.ronaldreagan.com/nr_13.html
> Let the record show: The reduction in the HUD budget during fiscal
> years 1981-83 was from $34.2 billion to $16.6 billion (a little more
> than 50 per cent). More importantly, it was a cut in authorizations,
> not outlays. As Annelise Anderson explains (p. 49)(?), and an
> authorization merely sets a spending limit, much as a Visa or
> Mastercard account establishes a personal credit line. Money
> authorized reveals nothing about money spent. A federal agency
> conceivably can receive a zero-dollar authorization for a given year,
> and still raise its outlays by drawing upon unspent authorizations
> from prior years.
>
>
so did they?


> > 6. LIMBAUGH: "There's no such thing as an implied contract." (Radio
> > show, quoted in FRQ, Spring/93)
>
> Can I see that in context?
>

 Is there a context  in which it would be a true statement? Cause I can't
think of one.


> 

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