I came to a very similar conclusion some time ago.
Try playing a popular board game with someone of average or below average intelligence. Try proposing before the game a set of rule changes. The response will be "no lets keep the default rules to keep it fair", even if the game is broken or imbalanced and even if you can explain to them why this is so. Is this an irrational position for them to take?
If you observed a game in a parallel world where everyone is smarter by one or two standard deviations, I think their response would basically be the same. But if you just raise your and their IQ in this universe I think their response may well differ. Can anyone see why I think this is so?
I also noted that intelligent people may be more vulnerable to this because they are unused to mistrusting their own wits when evaluating the arguments of clever others. People probably have all sorts of bad associations with this kind of advice but pause to consider if you would wish your five year old to respond to reasonable arguments from random strangers wanting entry into your house or asking him to follow them. Also note that the few cases when this might be a good idea (policeman, fireman, ..) can be explicitly discuses and implemented in the little tyke's brain.
An unsupervised five-year-old will let a stranger indoors, take candy from a stranger, play with a gun he finds etc. no matter what you drill into him.
An interesting blog post by Razib Khan, who many here probably know from his Gene Expression blog, the old gnxp site or perhaps from his BHTV debate with Eliezer.
I recommend following the link and reading the rest of it there, not only does interestingness continue, the comment section there is usually worth reading since he vigorously moderates it.