The 48 Laws Of Power

(Utkarsh JhaWsTmab) #1
()n
(he
other/mm].It
i.\'

11 rmlremrrinwmlulirm


tobe
stupizl.
For
m.s.‘tz/1.x‘


wumulzis
agrcrtuh/¢'
to

the
(Indy.

.\'l7itrlmtvthe

mind
gum!

lo
feel
its

\'upz'Vmri!y.'


and 41 man


willseek
<'Im1])unV

likely
to
give
himI/nix‘

fwlnzg,

us
inmmzrvcly

usheWill
uppruuc/1

the

_firr'plm*v


orwalkmthe

.\‘IlVl
if
hewarnsto
get

warm.Bu!llzlrmcam‘

thatIn:willbeills/ikurl

rmtlttffltttll
ufhixsupe-


riority;
umi1'/clmanix

/0be
Iilrml.
hemm‘!

really

be
in/'eriur
in

pain!ofinrcllecl.

ARIHiZR


Sr
II(wl~.N|IAL=|~:R.

l7h‘2*l~l?<(»()

158
1
LAW 21

they

hadtoreturntoSanFrancisco.The

jewels

that
Tiffany

had
examined

they

leftwith

Harpending

for

safekeeping.

Severalweeks

later,

a
mannamedLouis

Janin,

the
best
miningexpert

in
the
country,

metthe
prospectors

inSanFrancisco.
_]ani.n

wasaborn

skeptic

whowasdeterminedtomakesurethattheminewasnotafraud.

Accompanyingjanin

were

Harpending,

and severalotherinterestedfi~


nanciers.Aswiththe
previousexpert,

the
prospectors

ledtheteam

through

a

complex

seriesof

canyons,completelyconfusing

themastotheirwhere

abouts.
Arriving

atthe
site,
thefinancierswatchedinamazementas
janin

dug

thearea

up,leveling

anthills,
turning

over

boulders,

and

finding

emer-

alds,rubies,

sapphires,

andmostofalldiamonds.The

dig

lasted

eightdays,

and

by

the

end,

wasconvinced:Hetoldtheinvestorsthat

they

now

possessed


therichestfieldin

mininghistory.

“Withahundredmenand

propermachinery,"

he
told

them,

“I
would
guarantee

to
send
outone
mil

liondollarsindiamonds

everythirtydays."

Returning

toSanFranciscoafew

days

later,
Ralston,

Harpending,

and

company

actedfasttoforma

$10

million
corporation

of
private

investors.

First,however,

they

hadto
get

ridofArnoldandSlack.Thatmeant

hiding

their

excitement—theycertainly

didnotwant
torevealthefield’s
real

value.So

theyplayed

possum.

Whoknowsif

_]anin

is

right,they

toldthe

prospectors,

themine
may

notbeasrichaswethink.This
just

madethe

prospectorsangry.Trying

adifferent
tactic,

thefinancierstoldthe
two
men

thatif

they

insistedon

having

sharesinthe
mine,

they

wouldend

upbeing

fleeced
by

the

unscrupuloustycoons

andinvestors
who
wouldrunthecor-

poration;
better,

they

said,

totakethe

$700,000

already

offerecl—anenor»

moussumatthetime—and
put

their

greed

aside.Thisthe
prospectors

seemedto
understand,

and

theyfinallyagreed

totakethe
money,

inreturn

signing

the

rights

tothesiteover
to
the

financiers,

and

leavingmaps

to
it.

News
of
themine

spread

like
wildfire.

Prospectors

fanned
out
across

Wyoming.

Meanwhile

Harpending

and

groupbegan

spending

themillions

they

hadcollectedfromtheir
investors,

buyingequipment,hiring

thebest

meninthe

business,

and

furnishing

luxuriousofficesinNewYorkandSan

0

Francisco.

Afewweeks
later,

ontheirfirst
trip

backtothe
site,

they

learnedthe

hardtruth:Nota

single

diamondor

ruby

wastobefound.Itwasallafake.

They

weremined.

Harpending

had
unwittingly

luredtherichestmenin

theworldintothe

biggest

scamofthe
century.

Interpretation

ArnoldandSlack

pulled

offtheir

stupendous

connot

byusing

a
fake
engi-

neeror
bribing

Tiffany:

Allofthe
experts

hadbeenreal.Allofthemhon-

estly

believedintheexistenceofthemineandinthevalueofthe
gems.

Whathadfooledthemallwas

nothing

elsethanArnoldandSlackthem-

selves.Thetwomenseemedtobesuch

rubes,

such

hayseeds,

so
naive,
that

no
oneforaninstanthadbelievedthem

capable

ofanaudaciousscam.

The
prospectors

had

simply

observedthelawof
appearing

more

stupid

thanthemark-—thedeceiver’sFirstCommandment.
Free download pdf