I apologize if I misread your statement:WarmBodies wrote: . . . "inherently more honest". I never said that (although the ones I work with seem to be inherently very honest, I would not generalize that).
And as for:WarmBodies wrote: . . . I trust the business people I know more than I trust artists, monks and knitters. . . .
No reason for anyone to be bitter. But as the New Latin truism you quoted directs, it is important to try our best not to be gullible by swallowing unchallenged the claims of people trying to sell us a load of goods.WarmBodies wrote: . . . to remain bitter about businessmen, . . .
Personally I trust a stranger who is not trying to sell me something over the stranger who is, when choosing between strangers. One may be as dishonest as the other, but one has more of a known reason to be dishonest than the other. And that is something that, in my opinion, should always be taken into consideration, never ignored, when evaluating whom to lend my ears to.
But hey, maybe my having been raised in the mountains of Appalachia has something to do with my mind-set on such matters. History is seen from different angles from that perspective sometimes, I guess.