Limits of Truthful Speech?

What are the limits of truthful speech? Are there any limits?

A person should be responsible for what he says and writes. If he says and writes the truth, should he have to worry about what he says and writes?

How does one determine the truth?

In many cases, it's quite simple. If the person quotes an identifiable source, that ought to be sufficient. That source might be a document on which an organization is based.

When printed words in a document become the source of a disagreement, the parties should examine the document and first agree on what it says. Not what they think it says or what they'd like for it to say. Look at what it actually says.

Usually, the wording is clear. Sometimes, it helps to skip past the language that doesn't directly affect the meaning of a sentence.

What do you do when another party "interprets" a sentence differently? That party's interpretation doesn't change the meaning. The simplest response is "But that isn't what it says, is it?"

What happens if the other party's feelings get hurt? 

Business decisions should be made on facts. 

Years ago I read Radical Honesty, by Brad Blanton. I had heard a radio interview with Brad. He says, "You just tell the truth, all the time." The problem is that many people just cannot handle the truth.

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