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7/15/2003 11:53:00 PM | Timothy

It's not a lie if it's "technically accurate." And what if the lie isn't even technically accurate?
Sam Rosenfeld on on the Filibuster links to a good Michael Kinsley column:
Bushies fanned out to the weekend talk shows to note, as if with one voice, that what Bush said was technically accurate. But it was not accurate, even technically. The words in question were: "The British government has learned that Saddam Hussein recently sought significant quantities of uranium from Africa." Bush didn't say it was true, you see-he just said the Brits said it. This is a contemptible argument in any event. But to descend to the administration's level of nitpickery, the argument simply doesn't work. Bush didn't say that the Brits "said" this Africa business-he said they "learned" it. The difference between "said" and "learned" is that "learned" clearly means there is some pre-existing basis for believing whatever it is, apart from the fact that someone said it. Is it theoretically possible to "learn" something that is not true? I'm not sure (as Donald Rumsfeld would say). However, it certainly is not possible to say that someone has "learned" a piece of information without clearly intending to imply that you, the speaker, wish the listener to accept it as true. Bush expressed no skepticism or doubt, even though the Brits qualification was only added as protection because doubts had been expressed internally.
Sam Rosenfeld says "These guys can't even be bothered to dissemble competently. Infuriating!" I'm not as confident as Kinsley that Ari couldn't do a quadruple cartwheel on this somehow, but if the President did not lie, we cannot trust what he says. Sam also notes: "Any conservative who ever -- ever -- again indulges in a 'what the definition of is is' Clinton-bashing crack should be made to read this exchange in its entirety, so perfectly does it typify the uber-Clintonian dissembling that the Bush battalion engaged in across the airwaves this weekend, from Condi to Rummy to Powell on down." (Also: Adam Kushner berates the WSJ on yellowcake, and calpundit on why those 16 words matter )



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