The 48 Laws Of Power

(Utkarsh JhaWsTmab) #1
'|‘lIliLIAN

Once
upon

41 timethere


wasa
kingof/lrnvertia,

who.
beingoft:

lruriuus

mm
nfmind
andin

need
a,f's(>nw
new

aliversion,
sent
his

heralllx
tk9’()l.lg}‘IA’)llI

the

landtomake

the
following

/zm::lamnii'mz:

“Hearthis!Whatever

man
anmngyou
('10!

provehimselfthe
most

outrageous

liarin

Armeniashallrei-eivr

an
apple‘
made
ofpurc

goldfrom

thehands
of

His
.Ma;'€s!y
the
King!”

Peoplebegan


toswarrn

70 file
palacefrom

every
townandhamlrt

inthe
country,people

o/‘all

ranksand

conditions,
princux,

merclilinis,farmers‘.


priests,


richand
poor,

(alland
short,
fat
and

thin.Therewasnolack

of
liarsinthe
land,
and

eachonemidhisIaleto


the
king.

/1
ruler,

however,
hasheard

practicallyevery


sort
of

lie,
andnone
ofthoxe

nowmidhim

convincedthe
king
that

hehadIisrerxedtothe

hm
of

them.

The
king
was
begirr

ning

to
grow

tired
of

hisnew
sport

andwas

thinkingofmlling
the

wholecontest
off

with

out
declaring

a
winner,

whenthere
appeamd

before
him:2
poor,

ragged
man,
carrying

:1

large
earthenware

pitcher

underhisarm.

“Who!canIdo
for

vim?"
askedllis

Majesty.


“Sire;”'s~a§dthe
poor

man,
slightly

bewil-

256 LAW 31

February,

withmuch
celebration,

IvanreturnedtoMoscow.TheRussians

could
no

longercomplain

if
hebehaved

dictatorially-—-they

had
given

him

this
power

themselves.

Interpretation

IvantheTeniblefacedaterribledilemma:To
give

intothe

boyars

would

lead
tocertain
destruction,
but
civilwarwould
bring

adifferentkindof

ruin.Even
if
Ivancameoutof
sucha.waron
top,

the
counhy

wouldbedev-

astatedanditsdivisionswouldbe
stronger

thanever.His
weapon

ofchoice

inthe

past

hadbeentomakea
bold,
offensivemove.
Now,however,
that

kindofmovewouldturn

against

him—themore

boldly

beconfrontedhis

enemies,

theworsethereactionshewould

spark.

Themainweaknessofashowofforceisthatitstirs
up

resentment
and

eventually

leadstoa
response

that
eats
at

yourauthofity.

Ivan,

immensely

creativeintheuseof
power,

saw

clearly

thatthe

onlypath

to
thekindof

victory

hewantedwasafalsewithdrawal.Hewouldnotforcethe
country

overtohis
position,

hewould

give

it
“options”:

eitherhis
abdication,
and

certain

anarchy,

orhisaccessiontoabsolute
power.

Toback
up

his
move,

hemadeitclearthathe

preferred

toabdicate:“Call
my
bluffi”
he
said,

“andwatchwhat

happens.”

Noonecalledhisbluff.

Bywithdrawing

for

just

a
month,
heshowedthe
country

a

glimpse

ofthe

nightmares

thatwould

follow
his
abdication-—Taxtar
invasions,

civil
war,

ruin.
(All

ofthesedid

eventually

cometo
pass

after
Ivan’s

death,

in
the
infamous“Timeofthe

Troubles”)

Withdrawaland

disappearance

areclassic
ways

of

controlling

the
op»

tions.You
give

people

asenseofhow

things

willfall
apart

without
you,

and

you

offerthema“choice”:I
stayaway

and
you

sufferthe
consequences,

or

Iretumundercircumstances
thatIdictate.Inthismethodof

controlling

people’soptions,they

choosethe
option

that

givesyoupower

becausethe

alternativeis
just

too

unpleasant.

You
forcetheir
hand,
but

indirectly:They

seemtohaveachoice.Whenever

people

feel

they

havea
choice,

they

walk

into
yourtrap

thatmuchmore

easily.

OBSELRVANCEOFTHELAWII

Asa

seventeenth-century

French
courtesan,

NinondeLenclosfoundthat

herlifehadcertain

pleasures.

Herloverscamefrom

royalty

andaristoc-

racy,

and

theypaid

her
well,

entertainedherwiththeirwitand
intellect,

satisfiedherrather

demanding

sensual

needs,

andtreatedheralmostasan

equal.

Suchalifewas

infinitely

preferable

to

marriage.

In

1643,however,

Ninon’smotherdied

suddenly,

leaving

her,
atthe
age

of

twenty-three,

to

tally

aloneintheworld-«no

family,

no

dowry,nothing

tofallback
upon.

A

kindof
panic

overtookherandsheentereda
convent,
tuming

herbackon

herillustriouslovers.A
year

latershelefttheconventandmovedto

Lyons.

Whenshe

finallyreappeared

in

Paris,

in
1648,
loversandsuitorsflockedto

herdoorin
greater

numbersthanever
before,
forshewasthewittiestand
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