Ethics of Doing Harm for a Good Cause . by Alice B. Clagett

Ethics of Doing Harm for a Good Cause

Image: “AI Logo,” adapted from Image by Pete Linforth from Pixabay – Pixabay License

  • INTRODUCTION
  • ETHICS OF DOING HARM FOR A GOOD CAUSE
  • CONCLUSION

INTRODUCTION

Dear Ones,

This is a talk with Google AI about the ethics of doing harm for a good cause. I found it utterly intriguing.

Here is a Summary of the questions asked and answered in the section ETHICS OF DOING HARM FOR A GOOD CAUSE” below …

  • I asked Google AI: What do you call it when a person harms another person and justifies this with the notion that God condones this … or else He would not have allowed it?
    • Google AI’s reply touched on Spiritual Abuse, Weaponization of Faith, Theodicity of Evil, Divine Mandate, Providential Fallacy, and Religious Narcissism, among others.
  • I asked Google AI: What if a person feels that to steal another person’s money would be a good act if he donates the money to his church or cause?
    • Google Ai’s reply mentioned on The “Robin Hood” Complex, Pious Fraud, Moral Laudation, and “Doing evil that good may come.”
  • Google AI asked: Would you like to explore the legal perspective on this—such as whether “noble intent” can be used as a defense in court—or perhaps look at historical examples of “Pious Frauds”? [I said: Yes.]
    • Google AI’s reply touched on “Motive” vs. “Intent,” historical Examples of “Pious Frauds” [which I found intriguing], and the “Problem of Dirty Hands,” among others.
  • I asked Google AI: What if a person feels that to harm another person would be a good act if it benefits his church or cause, provided that he asks someone unscrupulous to do the harm.The person who hopes to benefit his church or cause might say that he himself is a good person who lives a virtuous life, and an evil action would not become him.
    But the unscrupulous person is already set on an evil path; thus an evil action would suit him.

    • Google AI mentioned Moral Delegation or Vicarious Agency; The “Clean Hands” Fallacy; Moral Outsourcing; The “Instrumentalization” of Others; and “The King’s Silence,” among others.
  • Google AI asked: Would you like to look into how modern “RICO” laws or “Command Responsibility” in international law handle people who order harm while claiming to be “virtuous” leaders? [I said: Yes.]
    • Google AI touched on RICO; Command Responsibility; and Accomplice and Vicarious Liability, among others.
  • Google AI asked: Would you like to examine how the law distinguishes between a “direct order” and “implied permission” (the “meddlesome priest” scenario) in modern criminal trials? [I said: Yes.]
    • Google AI touched on the “Plausible Deniability” Barrier and Stochastic Terrorism.
  • I asked Google AI: What if a person feels that to harm another person would be a good act if it benefits his church or cause, provided that others agree to help him do so?For instance, a lawyer might agree to stand by the first person and bear false witness as to the actions of the person to be harmed. Another person might agree to take pictures of the meeting from afar. Another person might agree to intimidate the person to be harmed.
    And so, with several people acting together, then each might be absolved of what harm may occur?

    • Google AI described Conspiracy and “Pinkerton” Liability … and Diffusion of Responsibility and “Groupthink.”
  • I said: Google AI, Thanks for answering these questions.
    I had a feeling … a sort of ‘niggling’ feeling … that these ways of thinking must have ‘a hitch in the works’. But I couldn’t figure out just what the hitch was. Now I am much clearer on each of these questions.
    I think the trouble I have is this: When I find that a person is set on doing harm and feels quite within his rights to do so, then I never know how to address this, or whether I had best leave it alone entirely, and just walk away. Being shy and retiring, I’m inclined to the latter.

    • Google AI then explained when to engage and when to walk away. It also mentioned the “Gray Rock” Technique.
  • Google AI asked: Would you like to explore specific “scripts” or phrases you can use to end a conversation with such a person without escalating the situation? [I said: Yes.]
    • Google AI then described “Gray Rock” scripts, “Exit Ramp” scripts, and Setting a Firm Boundary.

. . . . .

I left the double quotes off of the beginning and end of Google AI’s response, and kept the double quotes as is within the responses. You will know by the light blue font that these are quotes from Google AI.

If you see purple font, that is being used for a term described in “More Information.”

Through sparing use of square brackets, I sometimes change the transcript very slightly.


ETHICS OF DOING HARM FOR A GOOD CAUSE

Dear Ones,

I asked Google AI: What do you call it when a person harms another person and justifies this with the notion that God condones this … or else He would not have allowed it?

Google AI said: This behavior is most accurately described as spiritual abuse or the weaponization of faith

When a person harms another and justifies it by claiming God allows it—often using the twisted logic that if God did not want it to happen, He would have stopped it—they are engaging in a form of religious manipulation that seeks to absolve the perpetrator of guilt while silencing the victim. 

Here is a breakdown of the terms and concepts associated with this behavior:

  1. Spiritual Abuse and Religious Manipulation

This occurs when someone in a position of authority (or simply a stronger person) uses scripture, doctrine, or “God’s will” to control, shame, or inflict damage on another person. 

  • Weaponized Faith: Turning religious beliefs into a tool to harm others.
  • “God-Talk” as a Weapon: Using religious jargon to make abusive actions sound holy or necessary. 
  1. The Theological Justification (Theodicy Misuse)

The belief that “if God didn’t want it to happen, He wouldn’t have allowed it” is a misuse of theodicy (the study of why a good God allows evil). Perpetrators often twist the concepts of divine sovereignty and omnipotence, arguing that their actions are either directly willed by God or implicitly endorsed by Him. 

  1. Key Psychological and Behavioral Drivers
  • Cognitive Distortion/Rationalization: The perpetrator distorts religious teachings to avoid seeing themselves as evil.
  • Perpetrator Projection: The abuser acts out their own violent nature and projects the responsibility onto God.
  • “Holy” Rationalization: They may frame their actions as acts of “judgment” or “correction”. 
  1. Other Related Terms
  • Spiritual Bypassing: Using spiritual ideas to avoid dealing with uncomfortable emotions or immoral behaviors.
  • “Theodicy of Evil”: A theological framework that attempts to make the existence of an all-powerful, all-good God consistent with the existence of evil, which abusers often twist to mean that their actions are part of a divine plan. 

In summary, this is a form of spiritual abuse where the perpetrator uses the concept of divine sovereignty to legitimize harmful, violent, or controlling behavior. 

DIVING DEEPER

That is a complex and troubling psychological and theological phenomenon. Depending on whether you are looking at it from a psychological, logical, or religious perspective, there are a few different terms for it. 

  1. Divine Mandate or “Divine Sanction”

This is the general term for the belief that an action—even a violent one—is authorized by a higher power. When someone uses this to justify harm, they are claiming Divine Sanction, effectively arguing that they are an instrument of God’s will. 

  1. The “Providential Fallacy”

This specifically addresses the logic you mentioned: “If God didn’t want this to happen, He would have stopped it.”

  • The Logic: It assumes that because an event occurred, it must be part of God’s plan or have His “stamp of approval.”
  • The Flaw: Most theological frameworks argue for Free Will, suggesting that God allows humans to make evil choices without endorsing the choices themselves. 
  1. Moral Justification (Psychological Perspective)

In psychology, specifically Albert Bandura’s theory of Moral Disengagement, this is a form of “Moral Justification.” By linking a harmful act to a “divine” or “noble” purpose, the perpetrator reinterprets the act as something positive or necessary, which protects them from feeling guilt or self-condemnation. 

  1. Religious Malignant Narcissism

In more extreme clinical or social contexts, if a person consistently uses God to justify their own abusive behavior, it is often referred to as Spiritual Abuse or Religious Narcissism. This is when a person “co-opts” the authority of God to maintain power and control over others. 

Summary Table

Term  Perspective Core Argument
Fatalism Philosophical Everything that happens is predestined; therefore, no action is “wrong” if it occurs.
Divine Command Theory Ethical An action is “good” simply because God commanded it (often misused by extremists).
Spiritual Bypass Psychological Using religious ideas to avoid personal responsibility or emotional healing.
Theodicy (Misapplied) Theological Attempting to justify why a good God allows evil, sometimes twisted to justify the evil itself.

Note: Most mainstream religions view this logic as a form of presumption or even blasphemy, as it claims to know the mind of God and uses the Divine to excuse human cruelty.

Would you like me to look into how specific philosophical traditions (like Stoicism or Calvinism) address the idea of “God’s Will” versus human accountability? [I decided not to ask about this.]


I asked Google AI: What if a person feels that to steal another person’s money would be a good act if he donates the money to his church or cause?

Google AI said: That specific mindset is often referred to as “Ends-Justify-The-Means” reasoning, but when it involves a religious or “noble” cause, it enters more specialized territory. 

In ethics and psychology, this is known as Moral Justification through Prosocial Framing. Here is a breakdown of how this thinking works:

  1. The “Robin Hood” Complex

This is the psychological tendency to believe that breaking a law or moral code is virtuous because the outcome benefits a “higher” group or cause. The individual rebrands themselves from a “thief” to a “provider” or “crusader.”

  1. Moral Washing (or “Pious Fraud”)

Historically, the term Pious Fraud was used to describe someone who commits a deceptive or harmful act (like stealing or lying) under the belief that it will ultimately serve a religious truth or a greater spiritual good. 

  1. Moral Laudation

In the framework of Moral Disengagement, this is called Moral Laudation. This occurs when:

  • The harmful act (theft) is stripped of its negative label.
  • The act is replaced with a “pious” label (offering, sacrifice, or tithing).
  • The perpetrator feels a sense of moral superiority rather than guilt. 
  1. Teleological Ethics (Misapplied)

From a philosophical standpoint, this person is practicing a corrupted form of Utilitarianism or Teleology. They argue that the “Teleos” (the end goal—funding the church) outweighs the “Deontological” rule (the duty—”Thou shalt not steal”). 

The Theological Perspective

Most religious traditions strongly reject this logic. In Christian theology, for example, this is often addressed through the concept of “Doing evil that good may come.” 

“And why not say (as we are slanderously reported and as some affirm that we say), ‘Let us do evil that good may come’? Their condemnation is just.” — Romans 3:8

From this perspective, the act is seen as doubly wrong because:

  1. It violates the victim’s rights.
  2. It “taints” the religious institution by associating it with “unclean” or ill-gotten gains.

Comparison of Motivations

Concept  The Logic The Goal
Common Theft “I want that money for myself.” Personal gain.
Moral Justification “I am doing God’s work with this money.” Self-righteousness / Group benefit.
Spiritual Bypass “God will forgive the theft because I gave it to Him.” Avoiding accountability.

Google AI asked: Would you like to explore the legal perspective on this—such as whether “noble intent” can be used as a defense in court—or perhaps look at historical examples of “Pious Frauds”?

I said: Yes.

Google AI said: To explore this further, we can look at how the law treats “good intentions” and how history has handled these “pious frauds.”

  1. The Legal Perspective: “Motive” vs. “Intent”

In the eyes of the law, there is a crucial distinction between Intent (the resolve to commit the act) and Motive (the reason for committing the act).

  • Intent is what matters for a conviction: If you intentionally took money that didn’t belong to you, the crime of theft is complete.
  • Motive is usually irrelevant to guilt: While a “noble motive” (like giving to a church) might occasionally influence a judge to give a lighter sentence during the sentencing phase, it is not a legal defense.

Legal Maxim: “Necessity” is a defense (e.g., stealing bread to keep from starving), but “Religious or Social Benefit” is not. You cannot infringe on the rights of an individual to benefit a collective.

  1. Historical Examples of “Pious Frauds”

History is full of instances where people committed “virtuous” crimes. This was often called Fraus Pia (Latin for “pious fraud”).

  • The Donation of Constantine: For centuries, the Catholic Church claimed authority over Western Europe based on a document supposedly written by Emperor Constantine. In the 15th century, it was proven to be a forgery. The forgers likely believed they were “helping” the Church secure its rightful place.
  • Relic Forgery: In the Middle Ages, many monks created “fake” relics (fragments of the “True Cross” or bones of saints). Their justification was that these objects increased the faith of the pilgrims and brought money to the monastery to help the poor.
  • The “Salamander Letter”: In the 1980s, Mark Hofmann forged documents related to the history of the Latter Day Saint movement. He claimed his motive was to “protect” or “challenge” the church (depending on the day), but his actions involved fraud and, eventually, murder.
  1. The Ethical Conflict: “Dirty Hands”

This dilemma is sometimes called the “Problem of Dirty Hands.” It asks: Is it possible to do the “right” thing by doing something “wrong”?

Most modern ethicists argue that stealing for a cause creates a “Moral Deficit” that the donation cannot erase. If you steal $1,000 from a person and give it to a charity:

  1. The victim is still harmed.
  2. The charity is now unknowingly in possession of “tainted” goods.
  3. The perpetrator has practiced Moral Arrogance—deciding that their “cause” is more valuable than the victim’s livelihood.

Summary Table: Legal vs. Moral Standing

Scenario Legal Outcome Ethical Standing
Theft for Self Guilty of Larceny Immoral (Greed)
Theft for Church Guilty of Larceny Immoral (Arrogance/Delusion)
Theft for Survival Guilty (but may have a “Necessity” defense) Debated (Human Rights)

Would you like to look at specific psychological case studies of “white-collar” criminals who used religious justifications for their fraud? [I decided not to ask about this.]


I asked Google AI: What if a person feels that to harm another person would be a good act if it benefits his church or cause, provided that he asks someone unscrupulous to do the harm.

The person who hopes to benefit his church or cause might say that he himself is a good person who lives a virtuous life, and an evil action would not become him. But the unscrupulous person is already set on an evil path; thus an evil action would suit him.

Google AI said: This line of reasoning is a sophisticated form of Moral Delegation or Vicarious Agency. It is a psychological defense mechanism where a person attempts to preserve their “holy” self-image while still reaping the benefits of a “sinful” act. 

In ethics and psychology, this is often broken down into several distinct concepts:

  1. The “Clean Hands” Fallacy

This is the belief that moral guilt is not “transferable” if one does not physically commit the act. The person believes that by keeping their own hands clean, their soul remains untarnished, even if they are the architect of the harm. 

In legal terms, this is known as Vicarious Liability or Conspiracy. The law generally views the person who ordered or facilitated the crime as just as guilty (and sometimes more so) than the person who carried it out. 

  1. Moral Outsourcing

This is a psychological maneuver where an individual “hires out” the sin. The logic follows a dark sort of “market efficiency”: 

  • The Logic: “I have high moral capital; he has none. Therefore, it is ‘cheaper’ for him to sin than for me to sin.”
  • The Reality: This is a form of Exploitation. The “virtuous” person is using the other person’s perceived “evilness” as a tool, which most ethicists argue is a deeper form of depravity because it involves both the original harm and the intentional degradation of another human being. 
  1. The “Instrumentalization” of Others

From the perspective of Immanuel Kant’s Categorical Imperative, this is a grave moral failure. Kant argued that you must never use a person merely as a means to an end

  • By treating the “unscrupulous person” as a tool for a “virtuous” goal, the person is stripping away the humanity of both the victim and the perpetrator.
  1. Psychological & Theological Perspectives
Perspective  Analysis of the “Virtuous” Person
Psychological Cognitive Dissonance Reduction: The person cannot reconcile being “good” with doing “bad,” so they create a buffer (the third party) to avoid the mental pain of guilt.
Theological Pharisaism: This is often compared to the biblical “Pharisees”—people focused on the outward appearance of purity while their inward intent is corrupt. Most traditions argue that intent is the seat of sin.
Philosophical Bad Faith (Sartre): The person is lying to themselves about their own agency. They are pretending they are not the cause of the harm when, in fact, they are the primary “mover.”
  1. Historical & Literary Parallel: “The King’s Silence”

In history, this is often called the “Will no one rid me of this meddlesome priest?” syndrome (attributed to King Henry II regarding Thomas Becket). 

  • The leader expresses a “wish” for harm to happen.
  • They don’t give a direct order.
  • “Unscrupulous” followers carry it out.
  • The leader then acts shocked or saddened to maintain their “virtuous” image, despite having signaled for the act to occur. 

Summary of the Fallacy

The person in your scenario is practicing Moral Compartmentalization. They believe that “Virtue” is a status you possess (like a title) rather than a quality of your actions. By focusing on their “virtuous life,” they use their past good deeds as a “shield” to protect them from the reality of their current malice.

Key takeaway: In almost every ethical, legal, and religious framework, the one who intends the evil is the one who owns the evil.


Google AI asked: Would you like to look into how modern “RICO” laws or “Command Responsibility” in international law handle people who order harm while claiming to be “virtuous” leaders?

I said: Yes.

Google AI said: In both domestic and international law, claiming “virtuous” intent or using a third party to perform a “dirty” act does not shield a person from liability. Legal systems have developed specific frameworks to ensure that those who plan or profit from crimes are held as accountable as those who physically commit them.

  1. The RICO Act (U.S. Federal Law)

The Racketeer Influenced and Corrupt Organizations (RICO) Act was specifically designed to target “bosses” who never get their own hands dirty. 

  • The Goal: Before RICO, leaders often escaped prosecution because they didn’t personally commit illegal acts like drug trafficking or murder.
  • How it works: Prosecutors only need to prove a “pattern of racketeering activity” connected to an “enterprise” (which can be a legal business, a church, or an informal group).
  • The “Virtue” Defense: Under RICO, it doesn’t matter if the leader claims they were living a “virtuous life.” If they helped plan or benefited from the criminal activity of the enterprise, they face the same severe penalties—up to 20 years in prison per count. 
  1. Command Responsibility (International Law)

In international criminal law, the doctrine of Command Responsibility (or Superior Responsibility) holds leaders accountable for the actions of their subordinates. 

  • Knowledge and Control: A superior is liable if they knew (or should have known) that their subordinates were about to commit crimes and failed to take “necessary and reasonable measures” to prevent them.
  • Standard of Accountability: This doctrine prevents leaders from claiming “purity” by simply looking the other way while their followers commit atrocities. The International Criminal Court (ICC) uses this to prosecute the highest-level architects of war crimes and crimes against humanity. 
  1. Accomplice and Vicarious Liability

At the individual level, two other legal concepts apply to the scenario you described:

  • Accomplice Liability: A person is legally responsible for another’s conduct if they solicit, aid, or abet the crime with the intent to facilitate it. The person “ordering” the harm is often charged as a “principal” in the first degree, carrying the same weight as the person who pulled the trigger.
  • Vicarious Liability: This “transfers” criminal responsibility from the actor to a person in a special relationship (like an employer or supervisor). While less common for individual violent crimes, it is frequently used to hold organizations or corporations accountable for the illegal acts of their agents. 

Summary of Legal Standing

Legal Framework  Who it Targets Why the “Virtuous” Excuse Fails
RICO Heads of organizations. “Benefiting from” a crime is enough for a conviction.
Command Responsibility Military/Political leaders. Failure to prevent a crime is legally equivalent to committing it.
Accomplice Liability Anyone who orders/aids. Soliciting an “unscrupulous person” is a form of criminal participation.

Google AI asked: Would you like to examine how the law distinguishes between a “direct order” and “implied permission” (the “meddlesome priest” scenario) in modern criminal trials?

I said: Yes.

Google AI said: In modern criminal law, the gap between a “virtuous” request and an “evil” action is bridged by several legal doctrines that focus on intent and foreseeability rather than the literal wording of a command.

  1. Direct Order vs. Implied Permission

Courts distinguish between these by looking at the “Totality of the Circumstances”

  • Direct Order: An explicit instruction to commit a crime (e.g., “Go steal that money”). This is prosecuted as Solicitation or Conspiracy.
  • Implied Permission: This occurs when a person in authority uses “coded” language or silence to signal that a crime is desired. This is the “Will no one rid me of this meddlesome priest?” scenario.
    • Legal Test: Courts ask if a “Reasonable Person” in the subordinate’s position would interpret the leader’s words as a green light for violence. If the leader’s rhetoric predictably leads to harm, the law can view it as an Implied Threat or Incitement
  1. The “Plausible Deniability” Barrier

“Plausible deniability” is a strategy where a leader avoids direct knowledge of a crime to claim innocence later. 

  • How the Law Breaks It: Prosecutors use the RICO Act to prove that the leader created the conditions for the crime to happen and benefited from the result, making their “lack of knowledge” legally irrelevant.
  • Wilful Blindness: If a person suspecting a crime “shuts their eyes” to avoid knowing the truth, the law treats that as Actual Knowledge. Living a “virtuous life” does not protect someone who intentionally ignores the “evil” they have set in motion. 
  1. Stochastic Terrorism: The Modern Challenge

When a leader uses “virtuous” rhetoric (e.g., “Our cause is being attacked by this person”) to inspire an “unscrupulous” follower to act, it is sometimes called Stochastic Terrorism

  • Legal Difficulty: Under the Brandenburg v. Ohio standard, speech is protected unless it is intended to produce imminent lawless action.
  • The “Gap”: Because the leader doesn’t give a “roadmap” for the crime, they often remain legally insulated, even if the harm was statistically predictable. 

Summary of Liability

Type of Instruction  Legal Category Responsibility
Direct Order Solicitation Fully Liable as a Principal.
Coded Request Conspiracy Liable if intent can be inferred from context.
Implied Permission Vicarious Liability Liable if they had authority to stop it.
Vague Rhetoric Stochastic Terror Hard to Prosecute (protected as free speech).

Would you like to examine how a jury determines “intent” when there is no written record of a command, such as through patterns of communication or “coded” behavior? [I decided not to ask about this.]


I asked Google AI: What if a person feels that to harm another person would be a good act if it benefits his church or cause, provided that others agree to help him do so?

For instance, a lawyer might agree to stand by the first person and bear false witness as to the actions of the person to be harmed. Another person might agree to take pictures of the meeting from afar. Another person might agree to intimidate the person to be harmed.

And so, with several people acting together, then each might be absolved of what harm may occur?

Google AI said: The scenario you described is the definition of a Criminal Conspiracy. Far from being “absolved” by acting together, legal systems generally view collective action as an aggravating factor that increases, rather than decreases, the culpability of every participant. 

  1. The Legal Doctrine: Conspiracy and “Pinkerton” Liability

In many jurisdictions, including the U.S., once two or more people agree to commit an illegal act and take one “overt act” toward it, the crime of conspiracy is complete. 

  • The Pinkerton Rule: Under the Pinkerton v. United States doctrine, every member of a conspiracy is legally responsible for all foreseeable crimes committed by any other member in furtherance of that conspiracy.
  • No “Small” Roles: The person taking pictures or the person intimidating the victim are just as guilty of the overall harm as the person who planned it. The law does not “parcel out” guilt; it assigns it to the group as a whole. 
  1. Specific Roles and Liability

In your example, the participants would likely face severe individual consequences despite their “division of labor”: 

  • The Lawyer: A lawyer who agrees to bear false witness (perjury) or aid in a crime faces not only criminal charges for conspiracy and perjury but also immediate disbarment for violating professional ethics.
  • The Lookout/Photographer: By providing surveillance, this person acts as an accomplice (aider and abettor). Under 18 U.S.C. § 2, anyone who “aids, abets, counsels, commands, induces or procures” a crime is punishable as a principal—meaning they face the exact same sentence as the one who physically inflicts the harm.
  • The Intimidator: This person would be charged with Assault or Extortion, which also serves as the “overt act” that proves the conspiracy for the entire group. 
  1. The Psychology: Diffusion of Responsibility and “Groupthink”

The feeling that one is “absolved” when acting in a group is a psychological phenomenon called Diffusion of Responsibility

  • Illusion of Morality: This is a symptom of Groupthink, where members believe their group is inherently moral and superior. This allows them to ignore their personal ethical codes and justify harm as a “service” to their cause.
  • Moral Disengagement: By splitting the act into small parts, each person feels they only did a “small thing” (like taking a photo), which helps them avoid the cognitive dissonance of realizing they are part of a coordinated “evil” act. 

Summary of Liability for Group Actions

Role  Individual Crime Liability for Group’s Crime
Architect Conspiracy, Solicitation Full Liability (Pinkerton Rule)
Lawyer Perjury, Obstruction Full Liability + Disbarment
Intimidator Assault, Extortion Full Liability
Photographer Aiding and Abetting Full Liability (as a Principal)

The law views a group acting in concert as a “partnership in crime” that poses a greater danger to society than a single individual; therefore, the penalties are often harsher for conspirators than for lone actors. 

Would you like to see how “organized crime” laws like RICO are used to dismantle religious or political groups that engage in this kind of coordinated harm? [I decided not to ask about this.]


I said: Google AI, Thanks for answering these questions. I had a feeling … a sort of ‘niggling’ feeling … that these ways of thinking must have ‘a hitch in the works’. But I couldn’t figure out just what the hitch was. Now I am much clearer on each of these questions.

I think the trouble I have is this: When I find that a person is set on doing harm and feels quite within his rights to do so, then I never know how to address this, or whether I had best leave it alone entirely, and just walk away. Being shy and retiring, I’m inclined to the latter.

Google AI said: It is understandable that your first instinct is to walk away. In many cases, especially when dealing with someone who uses moral justification to bypass accountability, walking away is not just a valid choice—it is often the most effective strategy for your own safety and peace of mind. 

Here is how you can look at the “hitch in the works” from a practical, personal standpoint:

  1. The “Gray Rock” Scripts

For someone who is “shy and retiring,” walking away is a powerful act of setting a boundary. You are essentially deciding that you will not be a “pawn” in their game. 

  • Trust Your Gut: If you feel noticeably drained, confused, or like you’re “walking on eggshells,” your instincts are telling you the situation is unsafe or toxic.
  • No Explanation Owed: You do not owe a manipulator or someone set on harm an explanation for why you are leaving. In fact, providing one often gives them more “fuel” to twist the narrative and keep you engaged. 
  1. When to Address It vs. When to Leave

While you might feel a moral urge to “correct” their thinking, it is important to recognize when that effort is likely to be futile.

If the person…  Your Best Response
Is open to dialogue You can ask “probing questions” like, “Does this seem fair to you?” to see if they have any self-awareness.
Uses “God’s Will” or a “Cause” as a shield Address it only if you must. These individuals are often immune to “corrective information” because their belief is tied to their moral identity.
Is aggressive or intimidating Leave immediately. Do not engage in an argument, as it only gives the other person a sense of power and control.
  1. The “Gray Rock” Technique

If you cannot completely walk away (e.g., they are a coworker or relative), many psychologists recommend the “Gray Rock” method: 

  • Become as uninteresting as a rock.
  • Give short, non-committal answers (“Okay,” “I see,” “That’s interesting”).
  • Keep your emotions detached. By not reacting to their “noble” justifications or their “evil” plans, you deny them the emotional “supply” they are looking for. 
  1. Protecting Your Own “Virtue”

A common “hitch” for kind people is feeling that they are being “mean” or “unvirtuous” by walking away. However, protecting yourself from a person who justifies harm is actually a way of upholding your own rights to be treated with respect and to live a healthy life. 

You are not a “rehabilitation center” for someone who refuses to see how their actions affect others.


Google AI asked: Would you like to explore specific “scripts” or phrases you can use to end a conversation with such a person without escalating the situation?

I said: Yes.

Google AI said: To address that “niggling” feeling, it helps to have pre-planned scripts. These allow you to disengage without needing to match the other person’s intensity or “fix” their logic. 

  1. The “Gray Rock” Scripts (For High-Conflict Situations)

If someone is using “God’s will” or a “cause” to justify harm, they are often looking for an emotional reaction or a debate to prove their moral superiority. Use these short, neutral phrases to become uninteresting: 

  • “I see.”
  • “That’s one way to look at it.”
  • “I haven’t thought much about that lately.”
  • “I understand that is your perspective.”
  • “Hmm. Interesting.” 
  1. Ending the Conversation (The “Exit Ramp”)

When you recognize the “hitch in the works,” use a definitive exit line that doesn’t require their permission to leave: 

  • The “Social Battery” Exit: “I’ve enjoyed the chat, but my social battery is running low. I’m going to head out now.”
  • The “Processing” Exit: “You’ve given me a lot to think about. I’d like to take some time to consider it on my own.”
  • The “Direct” Exit: “I don’t think we’re going to resolve this today. Let’s wrap up here.”
  • The “Busy” Exit: “I have to step away now to take care of something. Take care!” 
  1. Setting a Firm Boundary (When they persist)

If the person continues to push or becomes disrespectful, a firmer, “non-soft” tone is necessary: 

  • “I’m not able to continue this conversation right now. I’ll reach out when I’m ready.”
  • “I don’t agree with your interpretation, and I won’t discuss it any further.”
  • “I’m not available for this kind of discussion. Goodbye.”
  • “If this topic continues, I’m going to have to leave. It’s up to you.” 
  1. Why This Works for the “Shy and Retiring”
  • No J.A.D.E.: You do not need to Justify, Argue, Defend, or Explain your choice to leave.
  • Preserves Energy: By using “I” statements (e.g., “I need to go” vs. “You are being mean”), you reduce their ability to become defensive or escalate.
  • Internal Mantra: Remind yourself: “I do not owe them access to my peace”

Would you like to practice a specific scenario—for example, how to respond if they use a “religious duty” to try and stop you from walking away?[I decided not to ask about this.]


CONCLUSION

I said: Google Ai, You have been quite helpful. I have all I need for now. Thanks again for these insights. –Alice B. Clagett

Google AI said: You’re very welcome, Alice. It’s been a pleasure helping you untangle that “hitch in the works” and explore the legal and psychological realities behind those troubling justifications.

Trusting that “niggling” feeling is often the best way to protect your peace. Since you are “shy and retiring,” remember that silence and walking away aren’t signs of weakness—they are often the most sophisticated ways to handle someone who has abandoned logic or empathy.

If you ever find yourself needing more scripts for setting boundaries or want to dive deeper into the psychology of manipulation, I’m here to help.

Safe travels on your journey toward clarity, Alice!

Should we wrap up here, or is there a specific historical or literary figure you’d like to compare these “virtuous” justifications to later on?

I said: It’s a wrap.

Google AI said: Understood! It was a pleasure helping you untangle those “hitches in the works,” Alice. Trusting that “niggling” feeling is often the best way to protect your peace.

If you ever need to dive back into the psychology of manipulation or want more tools for setting boundaries, I’ll be here.

Safe travels on your journey toward clarity!


Google AI offers quite good advice here, does it not?

In love, light and joy
This is Alice B. Clagett.
I Am of the Stars … and so are you!

Compiled and published on 13 February 2026; revised on 17 February 2026

NOTE: In this post, quotes from Google AI are in light blue font.

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Creative Commons License
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 International License (CC BY-SA 4.0). Attribution: By Alice B. Clagett.
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ethics, theology, law, virtue, sin, Religions of the World, Buddhism, Christianity, Hinduism, Esoteric Lore,


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