EE
True, but who's "good" and who's "bad". I suggest it is not that simple. Rather we deal with images in which we place ourselves. A way to deal with our inner pain and frustrations. Like a deer who fleas at the present of humans. Why? It don't know if we will hurt them. No, but it instinctly fears us and fleas into percieved safety. So does we, and if we have not a real place to escape to, we escape to an imaginairy place.
The Watch Tower plays on those fears, keeping them alive and directs the sense of fear against leaving the Organisation. Images of fear, where "the world" is bad but "I" (or "we") are good are inserted. The congregation is told to be a "spiritual oasis" amidst a chaotic, troubled and doomed world.
We all have those fears inside us, to a more or less extend degree. What we need to realize is, that there exists organisations that use this to bind people into their bondage. Although a nice adventure and distraction, the delusions does not hold the answer. Rather they impose a "black'n'white" view on life where we are lured to deem ourselves "good" and the hurting world around us "bad". We need to shed that perception and realize we are generally dealing with people that are in the same boat as ourselves: People that are trying to live/survive as human beings.
So, I am not a "good" man. I am just a man.