The 48 Laws Of Power

(Utkarsh JhaWsTmab) #1

428
LAW
48


For
centuriesthe

Japanese

would
accept

foreignersgraciously,

and
ap—

pearedsusceptible

to

foreign

culturesandinfluences.

joaoRodriguez,

a

Portuguese

priest

whoarrivedin
japan

in 1577 andlivedtherefor
many

years,
wrote,

“Iam

flabbergastedby

the

Japanesewillingness

to

my

andac-

cepteverythingPortuguese.”

Hesaw

japanese

inthe
streets
wearing

Por—


tugueseclothing,

with
rosary

beadsattheirnecksandcrossesattheir

hips.

This

might

seemlikea
weak,

mutable
culture,

but

]apa.n’sadaptability

actuallyprotected

the
country

from

having

analienculture

imposedby

military

invasion.Itseducedthe

Portuguese

andother
Westerners
intobe-

lieving

the

japanese

were

yielding

toa
superior

culturewhen

actually

the

foreign

culture’s
ways

were

merely

afashiontobedonnedanddoffed.

Underthe

surface,Japanese

culturethrived.Hadthe

Japanese

been
rigid

about

foreign

influencesandtriedto
fight

them
off,

theymight

havesuf-

feredthe
injuries

thattheWest
inflicted
onChina.Thatisthe
power

of

i'ormlessness—~—it


gives

the

aggressornothing

toreact

against,nothing

to
hit.

In
evolution,

largeness

isoftenthefirst

step

towardextinction.Whatis

immenseandbloatedhasno

mobility,

butmust

constantly

feeditself.The

unintelligent

areoftenseducedinto

believing

thatsizeconnotes
power,

the

bigger

thebetter.

In4-83
13.0.,
King

XerxesofPersiainvaded
Greece,

believing

hecould

conquer

the
country

inone

easycampaign.

After
all,
hehadthe

largest

army

everassembledforoneinvasion-—thehistorianHerodotusestimated

itatovermorethanfivemillion.ThePersians

planned

tobuilda

bridge

across
the

l-Iellespont

tooverrunGreece
fromthe
land,

whiletheir

equally

immense
navy

would
pin

the Greek

ships

in
harbor,
preventing

their

forcesfrom

escaping

tosea.The

plan

seemed
sure,
yet

asXerxes

prepared

the
invasion,

hisadviserArtabanuswarnedhismasterof
grave

misgivings:

“The
two

mightiestpowers

inthe
world
are

againstyou,”

hesaid.Xerxes

laughed-—whatpowers

couldmatch
his

giganticarmy?

“I
willtell
you

what

they

are,”
answeredArtabanus.“Thelandandthe
sea."
Therewere
nosafe

harbors

largeenough

toreceiveXerxes‘fleet.AndthemorelandthePer-

sians

conquered,

andthe

longer

their

supply

lines

stretched,

themoreru-

inousthecostof

feeding

this
immense
army

would
prove.

Thinking

hisadvisera
coward,
Xerxes

proceeded

withtheinvasion.

YetasArtabanus

predicted,

badweatheratseadecimatedthePersian

fleet,

whichwastoo

large

totakeshelterin
any

harbor.On
land,meanwhile,
the

Persian

armydestroyedeverything

inits

path,

which

only

madeit
impossi—

hieto

feed,

sincethedestructionincluded
crops

andstoresoffood.itwas

alsoan
easy

and

slowqnovingtarget.

TheGreeks

practiced

allkindsofde

ceptive

maneuverstodisorientthePersians.Xerxes’eventualdefeatatthe

handsoftheGreekallieswasanimmensedisaster.The
story

isemblematic

ofallthosewhosacrifice
mobility

forsize:Theflexibleandfleetoffootwill

almost

always

win,
for

they

havemore

strategicoptions.

Themore

gigantic

the
enemy,

theeasieritistoinduce

collapse.

Theneedforformlessnessbecomes
greater

theolderwe
get,

aswe

grow

more

likely

tobecomesetinour
ways

andassumetoo
rigid

aform.
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