Depends on the context, obviously, but my first interpretation would be “My values are not your values”. In popular usage “truth” means more than empirically proven facts about the objective reality—e.g. people routinely call “truth” what they believe not only in the descriptive but also in the normative sense.
I would recommend making clear two separations: between descriptive (“US economic growth has been slow recently”) and normative (“We need to accelerate the US economic growth”); and between facts (“The US GDP grew by 2.4% in 2015”), preferences(“Fighting inequality is more important than gross economic growth”), and forecasts, often conditional (“We can accelerate the economic growth by cutting taxes”).
Depends on the context, obviously, but my first interpretation would be “My values are not your values”. In popular usage “truth” means more than empirically proven facts about the objective reality—e.g. people routinely call “truth” what they believe not only in the descriptive but also in the normative sense.
I would recommend making clear two separations: between descriptive (“US economic growth has been slow recently”) and normative (“We need to accelerate the US economic growth”); and between facts (“The US GDP grew by 2.4% in 2015”), preferences(“Fighting inequality is more important than gross economic growth”), and forecasts, often conditional (“We can accelerate the economic growth by cutting taxes”).