The 48 Laws Of Power

(Utkarsh JhaWsTmab) #1

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

right.
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