Straight from the code...
Bonding - A low impedence path obtained by permanently joining all non-current-carrying metal parts to ensure electrical continuity, and having the capacity to conduct safetly any current impsed on it.
Ground - A connection to earth obtained by a grounding electrode.
I realise it sounds like I'm trying to play a game of symantics here, I'm really not.
I'm not arguing with you per-say, as we're both saying the same quite the same thing, that grounding is important, and critical for safety, but these are the electrical definitions of bonding and grounding, and cause confusion quite regularly, even with electrical professionals.
A "bond" does not constitute a "ground" because as you pointed out, a bond may fail, or may not actually be connected to ground. Any point up until the spike itself is arguably a bond. A bond does not become grounded until (And straight from the code here) it is "connected effectively with the general mass of the arth through a grounding path of sufficiently low impedence, and having an ampacity sufficient at all times, under the most severe conditions liable to arise in practice to prevent any current in the gorunding conductor to prevent harmful voltage to exist".
The 14AWG bonding wire in a standard 15A electrical outlet is NOT sufficient to to provide connection to ground a standard rad truck.
I don't remember the max current rating of the standard power connection for a CP vehicle, but I do know for sure it's not more then a hundred amps. That being said, the minimum ground would be 8 AWG
My point with all this is that just because it's bonded doesn't make it grounded. The 14AWG bonding wire in a 15A outlet isn't even sufficient to bond it.
Far too often, especially with sig ops in my experience, it's again an issue of a little knowledge being a dangerous thing.
Example being the "cheater"plug Beadwindow 7 was referring to. Somone (definitely a sig op) knew they need to ground things for safety and comms. They know that the electrical system of a building is grounded. What they didn't know is that plugging into an outlet was not sufficient for a safe ground.