I find that most people today, is they commit an offence great or small, defend themselves with silence.
TIME Magazine comments, "The rule holds that a suspect silent in the face of an accusation has tacitly admitted the crime." In spite of the Fifth Amendment. This week, I was faced with my own advice. Under pressure, I made a wrong choice -- an ethical mistake, as an editor. A writer was irate. I was tempted to be silent -- but I apologised, and described how it happened -- not as an excuse. Happily, the writer fully accepted the apology.
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