I was checking out at a store Friday when I handed the cashier a box containing individual items that she needed to count in order to charge me for. I told her there were six of them and she rang it up without checking.
“Well, if you’re going to take my word for it without looking, there were really only two,” I jokingly said to her.
“Oh, you wouldn’t lie to me,” she said quite seriously and confidently. “I can tell. Most people would, but you wouldn’t.”
My first reaction was to be grateful that someone could see my sterling character all the way through the fat and ugly exterior. It’s kind of nice to be trusted, isn’t it? And to be honest, this is something I’ve heard strangers say to me all my life. I seem to have a trustworthy-looking face.
But the more I thought about it, the more I realized that her reaction wasn’t really that great. In fact, it’s the sort of poor judgment people use all the time when they turn their lives over to politicians who they’ve decided they can trust.
Have you ever heard someone say — of a politician or actor or someone else they’ve never met — “I really like him”? We all seem to make instant, intuitive judgments about people, and we’re oddly sure that our judgments are correct, even if it’s absurd for other people to make such silly snap judgments.
Why did we slowly let them strip our neighborhoods of most trees?
We can see injustices of the past, but still honor men who achieved
Overthrow of Gaddafi no justification for attacks on other countries
Is it abuse to force atypical kids to conform to norms of society?
Proposals to skip rent payments are rooted in magical thinking
Lesson for McCain’s ’08 voters: The lesser of two evils is still evil
Can a free society tolerate intrusions into details of ‘The Lives of Others’?
After first six podcast episodes, I’m encouraged but still a rookie