Nonjustice
Nonjustice: "To abstain from the pursuit of justice."
The Five Principles of Nonjustice
1. The pursuit of justice is the cause of human suffering in our world, not the cure.
We live in a world where school children kill each other to get justice, where adults engage in every form of malice in the name of justice,
where terrorists indiscriminately massacre thousands of people under the delusions of justice, and where nations go to war waving the blood-red flag of justice.
All hurtful acts are motivated by the pursuit of justice.
Hence, justice is the primary cause of human-inflicted suffering in our world.
2. We are addicted to seeking justice against our enemies.
Despite the suffering we inflict upon ourselves by pursuing justice,
we continue to pursue justice anyway because we are literally addicted to it and see no viable alternative.
Like a narcotic, the pursuit of justice offers us fleeting intense bursts of pleasure that only leave us feeling worse and wanting more.
Like a narcotics pusher, the justice system encourages us to pursue more and more justice, producing an insatiable demand for itself and leaving a trail of suffering in its wake.
The only alternative to pursuing justice, forgiveness, seems either naïve or impossible, offering us no meaningful way of resolving our conflicts short of capitulation.
3. The most important trial of our lives each day is the trial of the people who wrong us.
During this trial, we must choose between justice and happiness. If we choose to pursue justice against our enemies, we inevitably cause ourselves only more suffering and unhappiness.
If we choose not to pursue justice against our enemies, we end our suffering and restore our happiness.
Thus, it is our freedom that is at stake during this trial, not the freedom of the people who wrong us.
The outcome of this trial will determine our health, happiness and peace of mind;
it will affect our relationships, family, job, nation and world.
4. The secret to resolving any conflict and restoring your happiness is to stop pursuing justice against your enemies...and to start practicing nonjustice.
Between Gandhi's teaching of nonviolence and Jesus' teaching of unconditional forgiveness lies a Middle Step.
This Middle Step is called nonjustice, meaning "to abstain from the pursuit of justice."
Even when we are unable to forgive our enemies, we can break the justice addiction and restore our happiness by taking the less difficult
Middle Step of practicing nonjustice and not further harming ourselves. By abstaining from the pursuit of justice,
we end the cycle of self-inflicted suffering and convert the affirmative act of forgiveness from theoretical possibility to spiritual certainty.
Nonjustice thus presents a third alternative to responding to conflict.
5. The secret to practicing nonjustice is Suing for Peace.
This is accomplished by submitting your disputes to The Nonjustice System.
If you sue your enemies for justice, you will win only your own suffering.
But if you sue your enemies for peace, you will win your happiness.
Between our secular justice systems and our religious traditions lies an
alternative to the justice system that contains 9 simple but powerful steps for
resolving conflicts and restoring peace and happiness. By combining jurisprudence with spirituality,
The Nonjustice System enables us to win the most important trial of our lives without lawyers, guns or money.
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"I had learnt the true practice of law. I had learnt to find out the better side of human nature and to enter men's hearts.
I realized that the true function of a lawyer was to unite parties riven asunder.
The lesson was so indelibly burnt into me that a large part of my time during the twenty years of my practice as a lawyer was occupied in bringing about private compromises of hundreds of cases.
I lost nothing thereby--not even money, certainly not my soul."
Mahatma Gandhi
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