The 48 Laws Of Power

(Utkarsh JhaWsTmab) #1
Inthesixteenth

century,Portuguese

missionariestriedfor
years

tocon

vertthe

peopleofjapan

to
Catholicism,
whileatthesametime

Portugal

hada

monopoly

ontradebetween
japan

and

Europe.Although

themis-

sionariesdidhavesome
success,

they

never
got

far
among

the

ruling

elite;

by

the

beginning

oftheseventeenth
century,

in

fact,

their

proselytizing

had

completelyantagonized

the

JapaneseemperorIeyasu.

WhentheDutch

began


to
arrivein
japan

in
great

numbers,

Ieyasu

wasmuch
relieved.
He

needed


Europeans

fortheirknow-howin
guns

and
navigation,

andhereat

lastwere


Europeans

whocared

nothing

for

spreadingreligion——the

Dutch

wanted

only

totrade.

Ieyasuswiftly

movedtoevictthe

Portuguese.

From

then
on,

he
would

only

dealwiththe

practicalminded

Dutch.

Japan

andHollandwere

vastly

different
cultures,

buteach
shared
a

timelessanduniversalconcern:selfiinterest.

Everypersonyou

dealwithis

likeanother
culuire,
analienlandwitha

past

thathas
nothing

todowith

yours.


Yet
you

can

bypass

thedifferencesbetween
you

andhim

byappeal-

ing

tohisself—interest.Donotbesubtle:Youhavevaluable

knowledge

to

share,
you

willfillhiscofferswith

gold,you

willmakehimlive

longer

and

happier.

This
isa

language

thatallofus

speak

andunderstand.

A

keystep

inthe
process

istounderstandtheother

person’spsychol~

ogy.


Ishevain?Isheconcernedabouthis
reputation

orhissocial

standing?

Doeshehave
enemies
you

could

help

him

vanquish?

Ishe

simply

mod»

vated

bymoney

and

power?

Whenthe

Mongols

invadedChinainthe
twelfth

century,they

threab

erredtoobliterateaculturethathadthrivedforovertwothousand
years.

Their
leader,

Genghis

Khan,
saw
nothing

inChina.buta
country

that

lacked

pasturing

forhis

horses,

andhedecidedto

destroy

the

place,

IeveI~

ing

all
its
cities,

for“it
wouldbebetter
to
exterminatetheChinese
andlet

the

grassgrow.”

Itwasnota
soldier,
a.

general,

ora
king

whosavedthe

Chinesefrom

devastation,

butamannamedYeluCh’u—Ts’ai.A
foreigner

himself,

Ch’u«Ts’aihadcometo

appreciate

the
superiority

ofChinesecul-

ture.He

managed

tomakehimselfatrustedadviserto

Genghis

Khan,

and

persuaded

himthathewould
reap

richesoutofthe

place

if,

insteadofde

straying

it,
he

simply

taxed
everyone

wholivedthere.Khansawthewis-

dominthisanddidasCh’u—Ts‘a.iadvised.


WhenKhantookthe

city

of

Kaifeng,

aftera
longsiege,

anddecidedto

massaxtre
itsinhabitants
(as
he
hadin
other
citiesthathadresisted
him),

Ch’u~Ts’ai
toldhim
thatthefinestcraftsmenand

engineers

in
Chinahad

fled
to

Kaifeng,

and
it
would
be
better
to
put

themtouse.

Kaifeng

was

spared.


Neverbeforehad

Genghis

Khanshownsuch
mercy,

butthenit

really

wasn’t
mercy

thatsaved

Kaifeng.

Ch‘u—Ts’aiknewKhanwell.Hewas


abarbaric

peasant

whocared
nothing

for
culuire,
orindeedfor

anything

otherthan
warfare
and

practical

results.Ch’u—Ts’ai
choseto

appeal

tothe

only

emotionthatwouldworkonsuchaman:

greed.

Self-interestistheleverthatwillmove

people.

Once
you

makethem

seehow
you

caninsome
way

meettheirneedsoradvancetheir
cause,

theirresistance
to

yourrequests

for

help

will

magically

fall
away.

Ateach

step


onthe
way

to
acquiringpower,you

musttrain

yourself

tothink
your

LAW 13 99
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