The 48 Laws Of Power

(Utkarsh JhaWsTmab) #1
This

supplies

thecleverand
cunning

withenormous
opportunities

for

deception.

For

people

whoare

choosing

betweenalternativesfindithard

to
believe


they

are

beingmanipulated

or
deceived;

they

cannotseethat

you


are

allowing

them
a
small
amount
offreewillin

exchange

foramuch

more

powerful

imposition

of
your

ownwill.

Setting

up

anarrow
range

of

choices,then,
should

always

bea
part

of

yourdeceptions.

Thereisa
say-

ing:

If
you

can
get

thebirdtowalkintothe
cage

on
its
own,

itwill

sing

that

muchmore


prettily.

The

following

are
among

themostcommonformsof

“controlling

the

options”:

ColortheChoices.Thiswasafavored

technique

of

HenryKissinger.

As

President
RichardNixon’s
secretary

of
state,

Kissinger

consideredhimself

betterinformed
than
his


boss,

and
believedthatin
most
situationshecould

makethebestdecisiononhisown.Butifhetriedtodetermine


policy,

he

wouldoffendor


perhapsenrage

a

notoriously

insecureman.So

Kissinger

would
propose


threeorfourchoicesofactionforeach
situation,
and
would

present

theminsucha
way

thattheonehe

preferredalways

seemed
the

bestsolution


compared

totheothers.Timeafler
time,
Nixonfellforthe

bait,

never

suspecting

thathewas
moving

where

Kissingerpushed

him.

Thisisanexcellentdevicetouseontheinsecuremaster.


Forcethe
Resistor.
One
ofthemain


problems

faced

by

Dr.MiltonH.Er-

ickson,

a

pioneer

of

hypnosistherapy

inthe
1950s,

was
the

relapse.

His
pa»

tients

might

seemtobe

recoveringrapidly,

buttheir

apparentsusceptibility

tothe

therapy

maskeda

deep

resistance:

They

wouldsoon

relapse

intoold

habits,

blamethe
doctor,

and
stop
coming

toseehim.Toavoid

this,

Ericlo

son


beganordering

some

patients

tohavea

relapse,

tomake
themselvesfeel

asbadaswhen

they

firstcamein—-——to
go

backto
square

one.Facedwith

this
option,


the

patients

would

usually

“choose”toavoidthe
relapse-

which,

of
course,
waswhatErickson

really

wanted.

Thisisa

goodtechnique

touseonchildrenandotherwillful

people

who


enjoydoing

the

opposite

ofwhat
you

askthemto:Pushthemto

“choose”what
you


want
them
to
do
byappearing

to
advocatethe

opposite.

Alterthe
Playing


Field.Inthe

1860s,john

D.Rockefellersetouttocre-

ateanoil


monopoly.

Ifhetriedto
buyup

thesmalleroil

companiesthey

would


figure

outwhathewas

doing

and

fight

back.
Instead,

he

began

se-

cretlybuyingup

the

railwaycompanies

that

transported

the
oil.
Whenhe

then


attempted

totakeovera

particular

company,

andmetwith
resistance,

heremindedthemoftheir


dependence

ontherails.

Refusing

them

ship-

ping,

or

simply

raising

their
fees,

couldruintheirbusiness.Rockefellera.l~


teredthe


playing

fieldsothatthe

onlyoptions

thesmalloil

producers

had

weretheoneshe
gave

them.

In
thistactic
youropponents

knowtheirhandis

being

forced,
butit

doesn’tmatter.The


technique

iseffective

against

thosewhoresistatall

costs.


LAW 31 259
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