louis camilleri's comments then were blasted by the campaign for tobacco free kids as an irresponsible form of corporate double-speak. after the meeting, the company repeated only camilleri's claim that "tobacco products are addictive and harmful." in tonight's "money file," separating fact from fiction when it comes to social security. here's eric schurenberg, editorial director at cbsmoneywatch.com. >> judging from my inbox, most americans believe the following about social security. in 1983, congress rewrote the law to build a huge trust fund to tide the system over through the baby boom's retirement. but congress raided the fund, and now the system will go bankrupt. well, not really. first, there was never a plan to lay money aside for the boomers. the prospect never comes up in the '83 reform. remember, at that time, social security was on the brink of not being able to mail out checks, and the oldest boomer was under 40. lawmakers worried about the next decade, not about creating a piggy bank for the 21st century. the trust fund is a trillion- dollar unforeseen consequence. did c