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			<title>How to Move From Righteousness to Right-Use-Ness</title>
			<link>http://www.whitenewsnow.com/blogs/tom-smith/151-how-move-righteousness-right-use-ness.html</link>
			<pubDate>Sat, 10 Mar 2012 15:08:02 GMT</pubDate>
			<description>---Quote (Originally by Tom Smith)--- 
*This was sent to me and I found it interesting... 
* 
Do you ever find yourself getting just a little...</description>
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					<img src="images/misc/quote_icon.png" alt="Quote" /> Originally Posted by <strong>Tom Smith</strong>
					<a href="showthread.php?p=129084#post129084" rel="nofollow"><img class="inlineimg" src="images/buttons/viewpost-right.png" alt="View Post" /></a>
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				<div class="message"><font size="3"><font color="#000000"><span style="font-family: Times New Roman"><b><i>This was sent to me and I found it interesting...<br />
</i></b><br />
Do you ever find yourself getting just a little irritated with people who can be so darned self-righteous? You know the people I mean -- the ones who are so far beyond being right that there's just no room for anyone else to even have a thought on the subject? Have you ever been accused of being self-righteous yourself?<br />
</span></font></font><br />
<font size="3"><font color="#000000"><span style="font-family: Times New Roman">If you are the self-righteous type, how's that working for you? I mean, really working for you.  I understand that righteousness comes equipped with all the trappings of being, well, right.  Being right all the time may allow you to bask in the glow of being apparently right, which may cast the illusion of working for you, but it also relegateseveryone else to the darkness of being wrong.</span></font></font><br />
<br />
<font size="3"><font color="#000000"><span style="font-family: Times New Roman">Do you know anyone who relishes being wrong all the time? I didn't think so.  Now we have an interesting dilemma: If you're the world's smartest person (which you must be if you're always right), then everyone else sits below you in the pecking order.  That can get old fast for the rest of us.  How do you develop meaningful friendships, real intimacy, if you're always right and everyone else comes up short?</span></font></font><br />
<br />
<span style="font-family: Times New Roman"><font size="3"><font color="#000000">When you're caught in the righteousness trap, your </font></font></span><a href="http://www.huffingtonpost.com/russell-bishop/selftalk-vs-soultalk-are-_b_1002405.html" target="_blank"><span style="font-family: Times New Roman"><font size="3"><font color="#0000ff">Self-Talk</font></font></span></a><font size="3"><font color="#000000"><span style="font-family: Times New Roman"> will work hard to convince yourself that you're right, and right beyond reason.   It's the beyond reason part that gets to be so annoying.   When there's no reasoning to be had,there's no point in even discussing the issue.   The only people who seem tothrive in this kind of trap are the politicians.  Of course, they're not so interested in meaningful communication or connection -- just being right and getting elected.  Gotta love those &quot;debates.&quot;<br />
</span></font></font><br />
<font size="3"><font color="#000000"><span style="font-family: Times New Roman">Are You Hiding Behind Righteousness?</span></font></font><br />
<br />
<span style="font-family: Times New Roman"><font size="3"><font color="#000000">Merriam-Webster tells us that righteous means to have a sense of </font></font></span><a href="http://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/righteous" target="_blank"><span style="font-family: Times New Roman"><font size="3"><font color="#0000ff">&quot;acting in accord with divine ormoral law&quot;</font></font></span></a><font size="3"><font color="#000000"><span style="font-family: Times New Roman"> often with &quot;an outraged sense of justice.  &quot;They define self-righteous as being &quot;narrowly moralistic.&quot;  This pretty much sums up the problem with righteousness: The righteous person often claims a form of moral indignation because they perceive that some law, rule or definition they made up in their own mind is being violated.</span></font></font><br />
<br />
<span style="font-family: Times New Roman"><font size="3"><font color="#000000">Righteousness can also become a great way to build defensive perimeters around more deeply held fears of inadequacy.   Those of us with highly skilled </font></font></span><a href="http://www.huffingtonpost.com/russell-bishop/soultalk-are-you-substitu_b_1014047.html" target="_blank"><span style="font-family: Times New Roman"><font size="3"><font color="#0000ff">inner critics</font></font></span></a><font size="3"><font color="#000000"><span style="font-family: Times New Roman"> have learned how to keep others at bay with our rapier wit or skillful ability to debate any issue.   How about you?   Have you ever taken on a sense of being morally or even divinely right in your point of view and assailed someone else or a different point of view with your version of an &quot;outraged sense of justice&quot;?</span></font></font><br />
<br />
<font size="3"><font color="#000000"><span style="font-family: Times New Roman">Years ago, I was arguing with a partner of mineabout the future directions we should be taking with our small consultingbusiness.   He was the more affable one, someone who easily made friends, someonewho made others feel at ease. I was the more critical one, the person who couldalways find fault with just about any argument.  I could talk circles around just about any point of view while he could talk others into the circle.<br />
</span></font></font><br />
<font size="3"><font color="#000000"><span style="font-family: Times New Roman">The critic has great potential value to offer inthat their perceptions can often be accurate.  However, their value lies not in the criticism per se, but in delivering the perception in such a manner that if addressed, could make a meaningful difference.  Like many critics, I had become more skilled at delivering the criticism with an aura of righteousness than at delivering useful perceptions. <br />
</span></font></font><br />
<font size="3"><font color="#000000"><span style="font-family: Times New Roman">So, here we were, at a crossroads in our business.He wanted to take us in one direction, which I thought would be limiting, while I wanted to take us into what I considered to be the wave of the future.  Underlying my arguments were a set of unconscious fears that I would not be well suited to the direction he wanted to go.  Rather than acknowledge my fears of inadequacy, I used my righteousness and perceptive capabilities to create arguments against his point of view.<br />
 </span></font></font><br />
<font size="3"><font color="#000000"><span style="font-family: Times New Roman">As in just about all cases of righteousness, therewas just no room for a discussion in my mind.  The more he pointed out something in support of his point of view, even something obvious, the more I argued against his reasoning.  Arguing against him had the net effect of assigning him the role of Mr. Wrong while I claimed the high ground of Mr. Right.  What I didn't recognize, however, was that the more I claimed the&quot;rightness&quot; of my arguments, the more isolated I became in our relationship.<br />
</span></font></font><br />
<font size="3"><font color="#000000"><span style="font-family: Times New Roman">Eventually, he simply let go of the argument (he had been discussing while I had been arguing), and fundamentally told me I was right.  Ah, the moral victory! He then let me know that he was going his separate way.  Oops. Not what I intended. However, I couldn't back down.  Instead, we both went our separate ways.<br />
</span></font></font><br />
<font size="3"><font color="#000000"><span style="font-family: Times New Roman">Curiously, we both turned out to be right.  He woundup building a good consulting practice in his area of focus and expertise andcontinues to do well.  I managed to do OK myself, and now we are back in discussions about merging our respective capabilities.  Had I recognized the underlying reality earlier on that we both were right, we could have engaged ina more constructive conversation building on the soundness of both points of view.  However, my ability to talk circles around just about any topic left me outsidethe only circle that mattered.</span></font></font><br />
<br />
<font size="3"><font color="#000000"><span style="font-family: Times New Roman">From Righteousness to Right-Use-Ness</span></font></font><br />
<br />
<font size="3"><font color="#000000"><span style="font-family: Times New Roman">One of the many lessons I learned in this process was the difference between &quot;right-use-ness&quot; and righteousness.  Sometime after we went our separate ways, my good friend and spiritual teacher, John-Roger, helped me understand the true value of righteousness.  He pointed out that rather than arguing for something out of a sense of moral outrage,true righteousness takes the form of what he called &quot;right-use-ness.&quot;<br />
</span></font></font><br />
<span style="font-family: Times New Roman"><font size="3"><font color="#000000">Right-use-ness echoes through the quiet voice ofyour </font></font></span><a href="http://www.huffingtonpost.com/russell-bishop/selftalk-vs-soultalk-are-_b_1002405.html" target="_blank"><span style="font-family: Times New Roman"><font size="3"><font color="#0000ff">Soul-Talk</font></font></span></a><font size="3"><font color="#000000"><span style="font-family: Times New Roman"> and is rather profound and yet profoundly simple at the same time.  We each have been given the gift of certain energies with which to live life.  We can use our mental energies, our emotional energies and our physical energies in just about anyway we choose. </span></font></font><br />
<br />
<font size="3"><font color="#000000"><span style="font-family: Times New Roman">Right-use-ness directs those energies into areas that are positive or uplifting and serve to bring people together.<br />
 </span></font></font><br />
<font size="3"><font color="#000000"><span style="font-family: Times New Roman">Righteousness tends to divide by focusing on judgment and protection of opinion.</span></font></font><br />
<br />
<font size="3"><font color="#000000"><span style="font-family: Times New Roman">Right-use-ness seeks to bring people together forthe mutual benefit of one another.  Righteousness sets people against oneanother.  Curiously, the righteous often truly care about mutual well-being, butget so caught up in being right that they can't move into the right-use-nessthey would actually prefer.<br />
</span></font></font><br />
<span style="font-family: Times New Roman"><font color="#000000">If you're curious about this distinction, watch the coming presidential election race for the differences. Sadly, any candidate whoa bandons the moral perch of righteousness in favor of right-use-ness will be branded anything from weak to flip-flopping.<br />
<br />
<br />
Russell Bishop    </font><a href="http://www.russellbishop.com/" target="_blank"><font color="#0000ff">www.RussellBishop.com</font></a></span></div>
			
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			<dc:creator>Tom Smith</dc:creator>
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			<title><![CDATA[So Many White People Just Don't Get It.]]></title>
			<link>http://www.whitenewsnow.com/blogs/tom-smith/5-so-many-white-people-just-dont-get.html</link>
			<pubDate>Thu, 16 Jun 2011 23:48:18 GMT</pubDate>
			<description><![CDATA[One of my favorite bloggers is Phillip Marlowe aka INCOGMAN.  Recently he wrote an article titled "I've Had It With Stupid White People", you can...]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<blockquote class="blogcontent restore">One of my favorite bloggers is Phillip Marlowe aka INCOGMAN.  Recently he wrote an article titled &quot;I've Had It With Stupid White People&quot;, you can read the article here --&gt;  <a href="http://incogman.net/06/2011/ive-had-it-with-stupid-white-fools/" target="_blank">http://incogman.net/06/2011/ive-had-...d-white-fools/</a><br />
<br />
Tonite, I had a similar experience at my favorite local Chinese joint.  I took my children out to eat and while we were eating, a White couple in their late 20's maybe mid 30's sat down at a table next to us.  The World News was on and a segment on the storm damage in Joplin just finished and I made the comment to them that &quot;it's odd they don't mention the fungus that's killing people there, or the secret morgue that not even reporters are allowed to get near&quot;.  The gentleman made a comment about the media being rubbish or something to that effect.  I saw this as an opportunity to open a conversation so I asked, where did the billions of gallons of oil go in the Gulf of Mexico?  What's the deal with the massive die-offs of fish and birds in the last year or so in the US and other parts of the world?  At that time the lady mentioned concentration camps in the US.  I asked if she was referring to the FEMA camps and she said yes.  I told her I believed they are real and asked if she was aware of the millions of coffin liners stored in Georgia.  She was.  Then she mentioned &quot;it's like another Holocaust&quot;.<br />
<br />
Well, for those of you that know me, you know that I have been researching the Holocaust for several years and believe there is no evidence that supports the mass gassing and burning of 600 Jews, much less 6,000,000.  I asked them if they knew the US had concentration camps during the war and that every Japanese man, woman and child in the US were interned in them for years.  Neither of them had a clue.  I went on to tell them that there has never been a mass grave of human remain or ash ever discovered in any alleged German &quot;death camp&quot;.  I went on to tell them some facts about Treblinka as learning about that particular camp is what made me really start digging into the Holocaust story.  When I explained that the camp operated for 14 months and that 850,000 Jews were gassed and burned on a 22 acre site, the gentleman said there's no way that could happen.  I thought I had them, so I went on to say that according to the official story, the Germans simply gassed and buried the first 600,000 or so, and it wasn't until the last 3 months they decided they needed to try to cover up their evil deeds so they began to burn the bodies after gassing them and dug up the first 600,000 corpses and burned them too!  I went on to the Belson pictures that everyone is familiar with and offered the truth about what those pictures represented and that over 1,000 autopsies were performed and not a single corpse was found to die of gassing of any kind.<br />
<br />
At this time the lady asked if I didn't like Jews.  I told her that I didn't like Jewish Extremists, and that Jewish Extremists are responsible for both World Wars and the current wars in the Middle East.  This was when the tide started turning against me.  I stated that I can't make anyone believe anything but, just because you see it on the News or read it in a book does not make it the truth.  The lady then said she didn't want to hear anything bad about the Jews because they are Gods Chosen people and anyone that goes against Israel goes against God.  I'm not even a Christian and her comment made me just about vomit.  I tried to explain that the Jews being Gods chosen didn't start appearing in Christianity until the Scofield reference and that Cyrus Scofield was a convicted con man.  After that, neither one of them wanted to hear another thing I said.  I said that I hoped I didn't ruin their meal but the truth usually isn't pretty.  I didn't see any sense in starting an argument, my family was done with our meal so we left.<br />
<br />
During the conversation I also asked &quot;why is it any race but the White race can have special interest groups, and who did they think was behind it?&quot;  I asked &quot;why is it that only White countries are being flooded with third worlders and being forced to assimilate with them and who did they think was behind it&quot;?  They weren't interested in hearing any of that either.<br />
<br />
It astounds me that people can be so brain dead, and not even willing to entertain listening to the truth.  My final comment to them as I was walking out the door was, &quot;you can think whatever you want about me but, the Jews haven't been persecuted for over 2,000 years for no good reason&quot;.</blockquote>

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			<dc:creator>Tom Smith</dc:creator>
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