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Doesn't make much sense, does it? If I accept that I don't have enough information on something, then I withhold judgement. There's nothing so reserved about mockery and cynicism. You're not cautious, you outright hedge that it's all a lie, and paint everyone else to be a complete idiot for thinking at all otherwise. The world runs on trust, specifically trusting expert advice. It'd seem that due to resource constraints and scale, that's the best available option. By extension, there should be absolutely nothing weird or surprising on people following suit. It's why these companies themselves rely on expert counsel, and defer to their appraisals for marketing. The opposite is what's weird and unusual, and what requires more substantiation. It's interesting that those who come out swinging against "trusting the experts", or really, trusting anyone else but them, not only ~never acknowledge this, but are seemingly outright proud of it, considering it as their own unique little trait, egocentrically revelling in it. It's almost as if epistemic rigor and truthfulness was not their actual concern. Woohoo, I'm distrustful and cynical. Behold my unfathomable wisdom! Bonus points if they're also hurtful, because flipping the arrow on "hard truths -> hurt feelings" is a masterclass in reasoning too, of course. I can appreciate faulting experts and organizations for misusing people's trust, and looking out for this angle, but given how unavoidable and fundamentally useful trusting itself is, blaming people for defaulting to trusting makes no sense to me whatsoever. It comes across as just the usual trope of blaming the individual. If you're from a lower-trust culture / environment, I can appreciate why you'd have a more distrustful default disposition (and why people might come across as suckers), but the principle still holds. |