The 48 Laws Of Power

(Utkarsh JhaWsTmab) #1

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216 LAW 27

THESCIENCEOF
Cl-IARLATANISM,

ORHOWTOCREATEACULTlNFIVEEASYSTEPS

In

searching,

as
you
must,

forthemethodsthatwill
gainyou

themost

power

for
theleast
effort,
you

will
find
the
creationofacultlike
following

oneofthemostelfective.
Having

a

largefollowingopensup

allsortsof

possibilities

for

deception;

not

only

will
your

followers

worship

you,

they

willdefend
you

from
your

enemiesandwill

voluntarily

takeontheworkof

enticing

othersto

joinyourfledgling

cult.Thiskindof
power

willlift
you

to

anotherrealm:Youwillno

longer

haveto

struggle

oruse

subterfuge

toen-

force
your

will.Youare
adored
and
cando
no
wrong.

You

might

thinkita
gargantuan

tasktocreatesucha

following,

butin

factitis

fairly

simple.

As

humans,

wehavea

desperate

needtobelievein

something,

anything.

Thismakesus

eminentlygullible:

We

simply

cannot

endure

longperiods

of
doubt,

orofthe

emptiness

thatcomesfromalackof

something

tobelievein.

Dangle

in
front
ofus
somenew
cause,elixir,
get-

rich-quick

scheme,

or
thelatest

technological

trendor
art
movementand

we

leap

fromthewaterasonetotakethebait.Lookat

history:

Thechroni-

clesofthenewtrendsandcultsthathavemadeamass
following

forthem-

selvescouldfilla

library.

Afterafew
centuries,

afew

decades,

afew
years,

afew
months,

theygenerally

look
ridiculous,
butatthetime

they

seemso

attractive,
so

transcendental,

sodivine.

Always

inarushtobelievein

something,

wewillmanufacturesaints

andfaithsoutof

nothing.

Donotletthis
gullibilitygo

towaste:Make
your»

selfthe

object

of

worship.

Make

people

formacult
around
you.

The

greatEuropean

Charlatansofthe
sixteenthand
seventeenthten»

turiesmasteredtheartof

cultmaking.They

lived,
aswedo
now,
inatime

oftransformation:

Organizedreligion

wasonthe
wane,
scienceontherise.

People

were

desperate

to
mlly

aroundanewcauseorfaith.TheCharlatans

had

begun

bypeddling

health
elixirsandalchernic
shortcutstowealth.

Moving quickly

fromtown to
town,

theyoriginally

focused on small

groups—until,by

accident,

they

stumbledon
a
truthofhumannature:

The

larger

the

grouptheygathered

around

themselves,

theeasieritwasto

deceive.

Thecharlatanwouldstationhimselfona

high

wooden

platform

(hence


theterm

“mountebank”)

andcrowdswouldswarmaroundhim.Ina
group

setting,people

weremore
emotional,
lessabletoreason.Hadthecharlatan

spoken

tothem

individually,

theymight

havefoundhim
ridiculous,
butlost

inacrowd

they

got

caughtup

inacommunalmoodof
rapt

attention.Itbe

came

impossible

for
them
tofindthedistanceto
be

skeptical,Any

deficien-

cies
in
thecharlatan’sideaswerehidden

by

the
zeal
ofthe
mass.Passion

and
enthusiasm

sweptthrough

the
crowd
likea

contagion,

and

they

reacted

violently

to
anyone

whodaredto

spread

aseedofdoubt.Both

consciously

studying

this

dynamic

over decades of
experiment

and

spontaneously

adapting

tothesesituationsas

theyhappened,

thecharlatans

perfected

the

scienceof
attracting

and
holding

a
crowd,

molding

thecrowdintofollowers

andthefollowersinto
a
cult.
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