Johnny Carson's first network show was a quiz program called "Who Do You Trust?" If that were broadcast today, the collective answer might be: very few!   Back in the 1950s and '60s, lying and stealing were kind of serious.  If caught, you likely paid a price.  Not anymore.   A new academic study puts forth that trusting other people increases happiness. Trust helps us form "vital social connections" and prosper.
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Bill O'Reilly
By: Bill O'Reilly
Trusting People
Johnny Carson's first network show was a quiz program called "Who Do You Trust?" If that were broadcast today, the collective answer might be: very few!
 
Back in the 1950s and '60s, lying and stealing were kind of serious.  If caught, you likely paid a price.  Not anymore.
 
A new academic study puts forth that trusting other people increases happiness. Trust helps us form "vital social connections" and prosper.

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