The 48 Laws Of Power

(Utkarsh JhaWsTmab) #1

204 LAW20‘


rificeisa
ritual,

perhaps

themostancient
ritualof
all;

ritualtooisawell-

spring

of
power.

Inthe
killing

ofde
Orco,
noteCesa.re’s

symbolic

andritu-

alistic

display

of
his

body.By

framing

itinthisdramatic
way

hefocused

guilt

outwardThecitizens
of

Romagnaresponded

instantly.

Becauseit

comesso

naturally

toustolookoutward
ratherthan
inward,

we

readily

ac~

cept

the

scapegoat’s

guilt.

The

bloody

sacrificeofthe

scapegoat

seems
a
barbaric
relicofthe

past,

butthe
practice

livesontothis

day,

if
indirectly

and

symbolically;

since

powerdepends

on
appearances,

andthosein
power

mustseemnever

tomake

mistakes,

theuseof

scapegoats

is
as

popular

asever.Whatmodern

leaderwilltake

responsibility

forhisblunders?
Hesearchesoutothers

to
blame,

a

scapegoat

tosacrifice.WhenMao

Tse-tung’s

CulturalRev—


olutionfailed

miserably,

hemadeno

apologies

orexcusestotheChinese

people;

instead,

likeTs’aoTs’ao
before
him,

heoffered
upscapegoats,

in»

cluding

hisown

personal

secretary

and
higlrranking

memberofthe
Party,

Ch
’en
Po-ta.

FranklinD. Roosevelthada
reputation

for

honesty

andfairness.

Throughout

his
career,however,
hefaced
many

situationsinwhich

being

thenice
guy

wouldhave

spelledpoliticald.isaster—yet

hecouldnotbe

seenasthe
agent

of
any

foul

play.

For
twentyyears,

then,

his

secretary,

Louis
Howe,

played

theroledeOrcohad.Hehandledthe
backroom
deals,

the

manipulation

ofthe
press,

theunderhandecl
campaign

maneuvers.And

wheneveramistakewas
committed,

ora

dirty

trick

contradicting

Roo-

sevelt’s

carefully

crafted

image

became

public,

Howeservedasthe
scape-

goat,

and
never

complained.

Besides

convenientlyshifting

blame,

a
scapegoat

canserveasawarn-

ing

toothers.In 1631
a
plot

washatchedtooustFrance’sCardinalRiche-

lieufrom
power,

a
plot

thatbecameknownas“The

Day

ofthe

Dupes.”

It

almost

succeeded,

sinceitinvolvedthe
upper

echelonsof
government,

in«

cluding

the
queen

mother.But

through

luckandhisown
connivances,

Richelieusurvived.

Oneofthe

keyconspirators

wasamannamed
Marillac,

the

keeper

of

theseals.Richelieucouldnot
imprison

himwithout

implicating

the
queen

mother,

an

extremelydangerous

tactic,

so
he

targeted

Marillac’s
brother,

a

marshalinthe
army.

Thismanhadnoinvolvementinthe

plot.

Richelieu,

however,
afraidthatother

conspiraciesmight

beinthe
air,

especially

inthe

army,

decidedtosetan

example.

Hetriedthebrotheron

trurnped«up

charges

andhadhimexecuted.Inthis
way

he

indirectlypunished

thereal

perpetrator,

whohad

thought

himself

protected,

andwarned
any

future

conspirators

thathewouldnotshrinkfrom

sacrificing

theinnocentto
pro-

tecthisown
power.

'


Infactitisoftenwisetochoosethemost
innocent
victim

possible

asa

sacrificial
goat.

Such

people

willnotbe

powerfulenough

to
fightyou,

and

theirnaive
protestsmay

beseenas

protesting

too

much—may

be
seen,
in

other
words,

asa

sign

oftheir

guilt.

Be

careful,however,

not
to
create
a

martyr.

Itis
important

that
ytm

remainthe
victim,

the
poor

leader

betrayed
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