Friday, September 13, 2013

How does it feel?

Perhaps you dance several times a month. Some dances you go to are legitimate, straight-up and wholesome. Alas, some dances in your local area are run by robbing, stealing, lying, cheating swindlers who use stolen robbery loot to hold dances for folks who endorse crime and theft.

How does it feel to you? Can you detect any difference between "right" and "wrong"? If a dance is paid for with stolen robbery loot, at a club which was outright swindled away from the very people who built the club, by robbers who cheat, swindle, defame and defraud your former "friends" ... does that feel any different (to you) than a regular ordinary good square dance?

This is an important question. Your answer is important.

It's such a disgrace when people (perhaps even you) choose "wrong" over "right". Yet the very true fact is that some people (perhaps even you) cannot detect any difference at all between right and wrong.

Does this describe YOU? Does a legitimate rightful dance feel any different, to you, than a stolen swindled cheated event?

If you want to do what's right, first you must be able to discern the fundamental difference between "right" and "wrong". So ... can you tell the difference? When you participate in an event which only exists as a result of robbery, theft, crime, swindling, defamation, back-stabbing and/or cheating, does it feel any different to YOU than other square dances?

You can be assured that there is a very real difference between "right" and "wrong". The only question is, can you feel the difference? No matter how slight that difference might be, do you know right from wrong?

And if you DO know the difference between right and wrong, why on earth would you support wrongdoing?

Let's all start paying attention to the fact that "right" feels different from "wrong". Let's support good honest right events and let's steer clear of cheating lying swindling stolen wrong robbery events. Let's make the world a better place by choosing "right" over "wrong". Is that too much to ask?