Since becoming a Manager, Chu Guang had dealt with a multitude of survivor issues and had seldom trusted someone's unilateral statements.
It wasn't that he was worried about being harmed.
Rather, anyone who could speak was bound, whether consciously or unconsciously, to intersperse their speech with a little of their own perspective and thoughts.
It depended on a person's self-awareness, and their awareness of others and the world.
Therefore, in explaining something, most people, even if they were telling the truth, were not necessarily "absolutely" objective.
If one were to completely believe them, it was easy to be led by the nose.
Of course, this didn't mean that a less objective statement was a lie. After all, even a bona fide scammer would be foolish to directly lie.
Once their logic wasn't consistent, they would be trapped in a deadlocked situation where no one could defend them, and to maintain logical consistency, they had to fabricate one flawed lie after another.