Facts, schmacts from the President:

Facts, schmacts from the President
: The Washington Post catches George in some fibs:

President Bush, speaking to the nation this month about the need to challenge Saddam Hussein, warned that Iraq has a growing fleet of unmanned aircraft that could be used “for missions targeting the United States.”

Last month, asked if there were new and conclusive evidence of Hussein’s nuclear weapons capabilities, Bush cited a report by the International Atomic Energy Agency saying the Iraqis were “six months away from developing a weapon.” And last week, the president said objections by a labor union to having customs officials wear radiation detectors has the potential to delay the policy “for a long period of time.”

All three assertions were powerful arguments for the actions Bush sought. And all three statements were dubious, if not wrong. Further information revealed that the aircraft lack the range to reach the United States; there was no such report by the IAEA; and the customs dispute over the detectors was resolved long ago.

As Bush leads the nation toward a confrontation with Iraq and his party into battle in midterm elections, his rhetoric has taken some flights of fancy in recent weeks.

Leisure travel will soon be

Leisure travel will soon be defined as the trip to bed
: Australians have obviously been warned not to go to Bali and Indonesia and now they’ve been warned not to go to Thailand or the Philippines, not to mention Burma.

News is what happened, not

News is what happened, not what happens
: So today we had an object lesson in the difficulties of live news.

I wasn’t brave enough to predict this publicly as it happened, but be honest: We all knew that the white van at the gas-station phone had bupkus to do with the sniper.

If you were a city editor at a paper, you wouldn’t have hesitated: You’d send lots of reporters and photographers and that’d be OK because by the time you were ready to publish, you’d know whether the story had merit — and the world wouldn’t be watching your reporting.

But on cable news, the world watches. The world can’t help but watch. It’s a great show. So the nonstories become stories because it’s all live and there’s no time to find out what we know and don’t know … and it leads a few blogs to jump to conclusions (see below).

Beware: News isn’t about being a pundit. News is about being a factfinder.

Bali memorial: Thomas Nephew sends

Bali memorial
: Thomas Nephew sends word of a memorial to the victims of terrorism in Bali; details here.

Misinformation: Metafilter jumped on the

Misinformation
: Metafilter jumped on the same white-van story this morning under the headline, “Sniper Suspect Arrested in Richmond, VA.”

But nobody said that. A van was hauled away. A man was taken into custody. Nobody said a sniper suspect was arrested.

A pro would know how to handle this; it’s just a trick of the trade. But those tricks do have value.

: Meanwhile, Wired reports on blog reporting on the sniper, quoting MIA blogger Ken Layne.