Droopy wrote:
I don't, if you haven't grasped it by now, place a great deal of veracity in what someone laboring within the constraints and boundaries of your own brain power thinks about mine.
That's a new way of using the word "veracity", I think.
I don't believe I have ever seen an educated native English speaker writing of "placing" veracity in something. Try a Google Advanced Search for the exact phrase "place veracity" and see how many examples you get. The only example in normal English on the first page seems to be where someone talks about getting a book called "Veracity" into bookstores, which doesn't really count.
I think Droopy really mean something like "credence" - you can certainly "place credence" in something in normal English usage - again, try the exact phrase in Google, and see how common the phrase is.
I sincerely applaud Droopy's efforts to become an educated person. It can't be easy. But often the more you learn about the English language, the simpler your prose gets. Using lots of big words in strange ways is what bright but naïve kids often do, until they have read enough good writing to show them how unnecessary it is.