Author

Topic: How lies can influence to your decisions? (Read 395 times)

legendary
Activity: 2436
Merit: 1362
June 14, 2016, 06:29:07 AM
#5
I am completely paranoid about situations so I take every sentence as a lie. (except most trusted people I know: best friends & family, not even gf)
So it is good to test out people if they lie to you or no. If you are lied once you should not let happen again.
vip
Activity: 1428
Merit: 1145
for me, in general, if there is a lie, then it will result of less trust, until someone is proven as a complete liar.
really, trust until you give up, for a certain time, so you can figure out who that person really is.

Complete liar? Follow the link in my sig to read the lies of cryptocurrency's number one serial liar, Leroy Fodor. He's followed closely by Craig Steven Wright, John Fitzpatrick, Josh Zerlan, Nick Spanos and Marshall Long, the latter two including Leroy trading bitcoins since 2009 when there were less than twenty users registered on this forum, the ONLY real source of Bitcoin related info back in the day.
legendary
Activity: 1582
Merit: 1006
beware of your keys.
for me, in general, if there is a lie, then it will result of less trust, until someone is proven as a complete liar.
really, trust until you give up, for a certain time, so you can figure out who that person really is.
sr. member
Activity: 1456
Merit: 267
Buy $BGL before it's too late!
Well, normally you make decisions based on facts and information you have. Lies can manipulate how someone thinks, so, whether the lie was deliberate or not, you most probably would make a wrong  decision if it's based from a lie Smiley
sr. member
Activity: 347
Merit: 250
Activity: 2017
How lies can influence to your decisions? Are you immune on those kind of lies?

https://bitcointalksearch.org/topic/breaking-news-satoshi-finally-revealed-1457039 an example..
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