[quote name='mykevermin']Oh, I wish I had time to sift through that. I am particularly fond of the table and corresponding explanation wherein they imply that $30K/year in SS funds is measurably worse than $10K/year in SS funds.[/QUOTE]
One thing that site does is that they throw so many facts and figures that it's practically unintelligible. The idea is that if they throw all these numbers at once, line after line, you'll either misread or misremember a specific fact. They also put the numbers in such a way that they're easy to misread. But they would argues, "Hey, we're just giving all the facts.
A perfect example is this is the following...
* In 2009, the administrative costs of the Social Security program were $6,182,000,000. This was equal to 0.90% of all Social Security outlays for the year or enough to pay 442,583 retired workers the average annual old-age benefit of $13,968 for 2010.[156] [157]
That line is factually accurate, but look how it's crafted. Instead of saying the Social security administration costs were 6.2 billion, they list out the numbers. But the real kicker is they state that administration costs were "0.90%" of the program. 0.90% ~ 1%. But, lets say your reading through this and being overloaded with numbers. It would be very easy to misread 0.90% as 90%. Especially when surrounded by long numbers. They could have said 0.9%, approx 1%, 00.9%, but they intentionally used 0.90%.
In addition, on the second line, they make an implication using facts, that Social Security is inefficient. "See, if it wasn't for all that administration cost we could pay 442,583 citizens $13,968." But there's no context. Social Security is a $700 billion program with over 50 million beneficiaries. Issuing the Social Security Cards, processions beneficiary applications, fraud auditing, educational materials, benefit mailings, customer service, staffing, they all cost money. A 1% administration cost is amazingly efficient. In fact, social security may be one of the most efficiently administered programs in the world. But they use facts in that one sentence to imply the opposite.
Most of the entire document, and there's pages of it, is like that.
It is absolutely insidious. All are factually accurate but they use all sorts of tricks. They'll cherry pick a fact from a document, and link it, but they neither give the direct quote or take it out of context. They don't expect the reader to actually go back and read the 40 page GAO report that actually explains the fact they cherry picked. Or they compare apples and oranges. Or they use facts with no context. Or they use quotes taken out of context to accuse people of being liars. (The Gore hit piece or the section on the media is a perfect example.)
Look, I'm a Republican, and I believe in reforming Social Security, and that includes reducing benefits and adding some market based reforms to the trust fund, but this web page actually stunned me with it's sophistication as a piece of right-wing propaganda. Even down to the seal of approval and the mission statement which they constantly violate in their own writing. The mention of the Declaration of Independence is specifically calculated. Then they come out and say, yeah we're libertarian/conservative, but that has no impact on our judgements. These are all unbiased facts.
It's absolutely astounding.