Mistrustful in a sentence as an adjective

This makes me somewhat mistrustful of the rest of their article, for no good reason.

Voters, broadly, are mistrustful of "hackers" and don't see a problem with searching computers at the border.

Any developer with a memory would be quite mistrustful of this "crusade", if any.

Many users of Bitcoin are deeply mistrustful of the government's ability to manage money, and making it distributed literally puts all the power into the hands of the people.

That is an interesting perspective on party conversation - mentally, if someone says [insert thing] sounds hard, generally my first reaction is to be mistrustful due to insincerity.

[edit] I got thinking about what happens when you cross conservatives with anarchists and got an image of dishevelled mud covered people who are mistrustful of interference from the government, but with lots of guns and land and money.

This was a high-school level prank, and it saddens me that we live in a world where people would take enough offense - where people are so mistrustful of one another - where people are so litigious, that federal law enforcement is called in after such.

But, I am highly mistrustful of Facebook, and consider some of their tactics and goals deeply unethical, so I wanted to point out that what many are viewing as a neutral "technology marches ever onward" sort of thing is really more a situation of a few companies extracting value from exposing people's private lives, and constantly being on the look out for more ways to extract that value and more ways to profit from that erosion of privacy.

Mistrustful definitions

adjective

openly distrustful and unwilling to confide

See also: leery suspicious untrusting wary