Fri Nov 06, 2015 at 03:00 AM PST
Chris Matthews excoriated Ben Carson for much of the nonsense he says on the campaign trail. Here's a sampling so far.
From
DailyKOS's Laura Clawson:
Ben Carson still believes that the Egyptian pyramids are
ancient granaries, and not just any ancient granaries. No, according to
Carson, they were built by the Biblical Joseph to store grain to prepare
for a famine. Asked by CBS News about his 1998 comments claiming that,
Carson said "It's still my belief, yes."
Carson reiterated to CBS News that "the pyramids were made
in a way that they had hermetically sealed compartments....You would
need that if you were trying to preserve grain for a long period of
time."
From
Vox's Timothy B. Lee:
Leading Republican presidential candidate Ben Carson has
never held elected office and isn't known for his in-depth understanding
of public policy issues. Critics have questioned whether it makes sense
to elect him president. But Carson tweeted a response to this criticism:
"It is important to remember that amateurs built the Ark and it was the professionals that built the Titanic."
Ben Carson’s tithe-based tax plan became the subject of a
computational tussle between him and a CNBC moderator during the third
GOP debate.
Carson said "it’s not true" that his plan would leave us with a $1.1 trillion hole, as moderator Becky Quick said.
But Quick’s math is sound, based on what's publicly known about
Carson's plan. Carson’s 15 percent flat tax would generate a $1.1
trillion hole. By his own math, his plan would create a $1 trillion
hole.
We rate Carson’s claim False.
In a Facebook post late Wednesday, Mr. Carson, a retired
neurosurgeon seeking the GOP presidential nomination, asked if the
American people really want officials with political experience. He
added, “Every signer of the Declaration of Independence had no elected
office experience.”
“That’s just patently false,” said Benjamin L. Carp, an associate
professor of history at Brooklyn College and author of books on the
American Revolution.
Ben Carson is the current GOP front runner. Voodoo economics is bad enough. What's next? Imaginary economics?
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