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by ErikHuisman 1122 days ago
I dont think either of these explanations is the moral of "The Boy Who Cried Wolf" :)
1 comments

What's the moral then?
I think the moral is about the boy, not the villagers and what they believe - it's that reputation is an important thing, because once you damage yours, you won't be able to use it even when you really need it.
I too am on that page
If I can jump in here: it's something like "be very careful when making extreme claims, because they probably won't be believed. If your claims turn out to be false, then they really won't be believed next time."

So it's about trust and reputation. If the village elder, whom everyone trusts, cried "wolf!" the villagers would be inclined to believe him.

That means the same as what he said.
No. nicwolff said the moral was about villagers and their skepticism. AlbertCory correctly said the moral is how lying damages the boy's reputation.

The moral to the listener is to not be like the boy. The moral is not, to be unlike the villagers.

No, because the lesson is that the boy shouldn't have lied. It's not "the village should have believed him again".
no it doesn't. See the other replies.
Don't have a small child be responsible for protecting your sheep from wolves? Esepcially if you have already determined not to come if he shouts for help.
Don't lie so people can trust you.
If you keep lying or making false alarms, people won't believe you when you're actually in trouble. So, it's better to tell the truth and be trustworthy, or you'll end up losing the trust of others when you really need it.

TL;DR: Don't lie, or trust will be lost.

That you should never tell the same lie twice.