Barry
Senior Member (Voting Rights)
Yes and noYes, of course there's a difference between factually and ethically wrong. I was talking about the former, as in, 'does it say what the guideline says?'.

The number of times in my life I have heard people claiming to be "honest" because they have only told the truth, but in fact have been lying by omission. Telling only the truth is not good enough, you have to tell enough of the truth to be sure to not mislead - if you do that deliberately then you are lying by omission. If a court of law deems that behaviour to be untruthful, then there is a very good reason for it.
A completely imaginary but valid example I sometimes cite. Suppose Mrs B's car suddenly swerves onto the pavement, and almost runs Mr C over. Mr C then goes round telling everyone about this, only too glad of the chance to take a pop at Mrs B, who he has never got on with. Very soon the whole village is up in arms about it, and Mrs B is the pariah of the neighbourhood. But then amongst all the rumour-mongering, Mr D then says "I know it must have been terrifying for Mr C - I saw what happened, but thank goodness Mrs B reacted so quickly, else she would have run that poor child over who darted out in front of her! Didn't Mr C say anything about that?"
The point being Mr C only ever told the truth - just not enough of it to be honest.