30 LAW 3
REVERSAL
Nosmoke
screen,
red
herring,
false
sincerity,
or
any
other
diversionary
de-
vicewillsucceedin
concealingyour
intentionsif
youalready
haveanes-
tablished
reputation
for
deception.
Andas
you get
olderand achieve
success,
itoftenbecomes
increasingly
difficultto
disguiseyourcunning.
Everyone
knows
youpracticedeception;persist
in
playing
naiveand
you
run
therisk
of
seeming
therankest
hypocrite,
whichwill
severely
limit
your
roomtomaneuver.Insuchcasesitisbettertoown
up,
to
appear
the
honest
rogue,
or,better,
the
repentant
rogue.
Not
only
will
you
beadmired
for
your
frankness,but,
mostwonderfuland
strange
of
all,
you
willbeable
tocontinue
yourstratagems.
AsP.T.
Barnum,
the
nineteenth-centuryking
of
humbuggery,grew
older,
helearnedtoembracehis
reputation
as
a
grand
deceiver.Atone
point
he
organized
abuffalohuntinNew
jersey,complete
withIndians
andafew
imported
buffalo.He
publicized
thehuntas
genuine,
butitcame
offasso
completely
fakethatthe
crowd,
insteadof
gettingangry
andask-
ing
fortheir
money
back,
was
greatly
amused.
They
knewBarnum
pulled
t:ricks
allthe
time;
thatwasthesecretofhis
success,
and
they
lovedhimfor
it.
Learning
alessonfromthis
affair,
Barnum
stoppedconcealing
allofhis
devices,
even
revealing
his
deceptions
inatell—all
autobiography.
As
Kierkegaard
wrote,
“Theworldwantstobedeceived.”
Finally,although
itiswiserto
divert
attentionfrom
yourpurposesby
presenting
a
bland,
familiar
exterior,
thereare
times
whenthe
colorful,
conspicuousgesture
isthe
rightdiversionary
tactic.The
great
charlatan
mountebanksofseventeenth-and
eighteenth-centuryEurope
usedhumor
andentertainmenttodeceivetheiraudiences.Dazzled
by
a
great
show,
the
public
wouldnotnoticethecharlatans’realintentions.Thusthestarcharla-
tan
himselfwould
appear
intownina
night-black
coach
drawn
by
black
horses.
Clowns,
tightrope
walkers,
andstarentertainerswould
accompany
him,
pullingpeople
intohisdemonstrationsofelixirsand
quackpotions.
Thecharlatanmadeentertainmentseemlikethebusinessofthe
day;
the
businessofthe
day
was
actually
thesaleoftheelixirsand
quackpotions.
Spectacle
and
entertainment,
clearly,
areexcellentdevicestoconceal
your
intentions,
but
they
cannotbeused
indefinitely.
The
publicgrows
tiredand
suspicious,
and
eventually
catchesontothetrick.Andindeedthe
charlatanshadtomove
quickly
fromtownto
town,
beforeword
spread
thatthe
potions
were
useless
andtheentertainmentatrick.Powerful
peo-
ple
withbland
exteriors,
ontheotherhand—the
Talleyrands,
theRoth-
schilds,
theSelassies—can
practice
their
deceptions
in the same
place
throughout
theirlifetimes.Theiractneverwears
thin,
and
rarely
causes
suspicion.
Thecolorfulsmokescreenshouldbeused
cautiously,
then,
and
only
whentheoccasionis