There are ways to purposefully speak in more or less unfalsifiable statements,
Cross-subject/cross-ocean example of this:
When being challenged about the systems for booking drive-through Covid-testing[1], the answer was that "a vast majority of people could access a local test
or request a postal test kit". Given that postal tests kits are (supposedly, but for the purposes of this statement might as well be) available to everyone, this requires no such asurance on the other bit of the 'or' branch of truth for the compound answer to be considered true. If anybody really wanted to later press them on this one pointless statement, they just point out that they were correct insofar as scoring a goal within the goalposts that they had moved within the answer itself.
I sometimes wish that live interviewers could see (or react, if they already do see) more readily to these little tricks. Easy to spot when listening to the radio, of course, but if you've got producers in your ear shouting that the time-pips are two minutes away and there's a minute of audio package needs to be fit in in-between thanking the interviewee and announcing the programme's end... Well, probably not something I could do, even without the critical thinking part.
[1] The Algorithm sent some people across nearly half the country[2] to a testing-station,
past numerous other nearer ones that are nowhere near over-used.
[2] Small as it is, but still sometimes a couple of hundred miles, and described to the end-user as crow-flies distance though some trips (Cornwall to Wales) have hefty diversions[3].
[3] Really, a government system that doesn't tap into
at least Ordnance Survey routefinding data seems almost like a designed-in oversight...