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Why Should I Listen to You When I’m Right and You’re Wrong?

Why Should I Listen to You When I’m Right and You’re Wrong?

I'm fascinated by people who publicly and proudly proclaim that they readily terminate relationships with those who disagree with their opinions, their political choices, their beliefs. To act this way privately is one thing, but to shout it out on social media is another.

It could be described as arrogance and the belief that they are so superior to those disagreeing with them that they don't want to be “soiled” in a relationship, even one that had been of long-standing. But it really strikes me as a type of confirmation bias, seeking to evoke the responses of others who feel the same way. “We” are right, “they” are wrong and need to be ousted from the tribe, because they are inferior.

Basically, it's a sorry case of low self-esteem, wherein they doesn't want to be in the presence of any threat to their rigid belief system because of the possibility, no matter how remote, that they may be wrong, or that there are legitimately two or more reasonable positions on an issue. To refuse to hear other points of view and, worse, to shun people who have them, is the height of anti-intellectualism. It's not arrogant, it's smug.

Written by

Alan Weiss is a consultant, speaker, and author of over 60 books. His consulting firm, Summit Consulting Group, Inc., has attracted clients from over 500 leading organizations around the world.

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