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Can we admit the truth and be honest with ourselves and others? Sometimes I wonder about that. A big lie seems like a best friend at our sides until it genuinely and utterly fails in every important way even to resemble the truth or anything honest.
With that said, I begin this article. We all findaneasyjob have a choice to be rational or irrational in life and existence at any level. When I think of rationality versus irrationality, I think of a giant war ran by an oversize government that loses everything to a smaller, better run, creatively managed government that is "supposed" to lose to the large, oversize government. This is a key to how reality works. The larger is supposed to win over the smaller, but the larger almost always loses to the smaller, more creative and better run regime because of irrational realities within the larger, that work better within the smaller. Indeed, a better government starts with better words: We saw that in 1776 with the American Revolution. Say and mean what you will about the founding realities with all their flaws of indentured servitude, slavery, pogroms and fear mongering, we have to first admit this historical truth to be rational with ourselves, all the words about freedom, truth and justice sound better than dictatorship, kings, queens, empires and all of that which came before at the very least. When we see and admit the whole picture without flinching, though, then we can genuinely grow. That is also what I mean by rationality versus irrationality with rational reality winning over the irrational "ideal" fantasies every single time in reality.
So, a comfortable big lie can seem better and more n4gm exciting and enriching than an uncomfortable real and honest truth that is real until we get the genuine bill, receipt and payment voucher for accepting that big lie.
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