Fuzzy asked a question. People who do know his life story (Fuzzy posted 7000+ posts with too much information in a lot of threads all over these forums) gave sound advice. But, that advise unfortunately was written as blanket statements.
You are correct that blanket statements are usually wrong. But, it is the way you said it that is the problem. By saying basically everyone in this thread (who know fuzzy and his story) is lying or stupid and wrong what are we to conclude? The logical conclusion to your post is that if everyone who says Fuzzy doesn't need a product is wrong, then Fuzzy must need the product. But that isn't the correct conclusion.
The correct conclusion is that everyone in the thread is giving sound advice when speaking about Fuzzy. There are exceptions and their blanket statements were poor statements. Their advice however, was quite accurate. You could have avoided this by confirming their advice but rebutting the blanket statements.
Fuzzy is a great artist making ~60k a year. But, he lives in California where $60k doesn't get very far. He has little savings, complains that it'll be very difficult to ever get a down payment on a house. He has relationships, but they are far from typical, and as far as I know aren't going to lead to children any time soon. A $300/hour advisor won't tell him anything that we haven't already said: for him, whole life is probably not the best answer at this point in his life.
There is no such thing as an unbiased professional anyways, even fee only professionals are biased since their livelyhood depends indirectly on the product. Please start another thread and we can discuss the people who DO benefit from whole life and how best to get it and sound advice when you need it.