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To: SeekAndFind

“FDR’s Treasury Secretary, Henry Morgenthau, wrote in his diary: “We have tried spending money. We are spending more than we have ever spent before and it does not work. … We have never made good on our promises. … I say after eight years of this Administration we have just as much unemployment as when we started … and an enormous debt to boot!”

The unemployment figures for FDR’s first eight years were: 18 percent in 1935; 14 percent in 1936; by 1938, unemployment was back to 20 percent. The stock market fell nearly 50 percent between August 1937 and March 1938. Columnist Walter Lippmann wrote, “With almost no important exception every measure he (Roosevelt) has been interested in for the past five months has been to reduce or discourage the production of wealth.” The last year of the Herbert Hoover administration, the top marginal income tax rate was raised from 24 to 63 percent. During the Roosevelt administration, the top rate was raised at first to 79 percent and then later to 90 percent. Hillsdale College economic historian Professor Burton Folsom notes that in 1941, Roosevelt even proposed a whopping 99.5 percent marginal rate on all incomes over $100,000. Much more of the Hoover/FDR fiasco can be found in “Great Myths of the Great Depression” ( HYPERLINK “http://fee.org/articles/great-myths-of-the-great-depression/"; \t “_blank” http://fee.org/articles/great-myths-of-the-great-depression/). “

http://townhall.com/columnists/WalterEWilliams/2010/07/14/a_failed_obama_hero/page/full


4 posted on 07/30/2010 10:06:35 AM PDT by Para-Ord.45
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To: Para-Ord.45

Thanks for the links!


7 posted on 07/30/2010 10:14:38 AM PDT by rlmorel (We are traveling "The Road to Serfdom".)
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