|ll'l(l|-'.|)'H «HIRI,
Many
wmk-numlezl
per.x*mn‘
incities
hope
indis(‘r)I»‘e1'
properly
nmicrtho
xurfareoflhe
mnhandmmake
some
profitfrom
It.In
the
Mugltrib
thereare
many
Serber
“.rrudnzIs"‘wlmart:
unabletornakz’a
living
by
natural
ways
and
means‘,
Theyuppmach
we?!-to-zio
peopfe
with
papers
thathavemm
margins
andrmzfain
rilhcrnon/Amine’writ»
ing
orwhat
they
claim
tohe(hrllanxlaticm
of
u
docu/new
wmten
by
theowner
0/lmricrl
a‘reo.mrtm',giving
the‘
cluetothe
hidingplum
Inthis
way.theytry
to
get
theirsuszenurxce
by
[persuuafing
thewell»
m-do]
tosemirhemour
to
dig
and
humfor
treasure.
()ccusimm[ly.
une
of
thesetremmru
hunters
displays
strangeinformatio.-1
or
some
remarkable
trick
afmagic
will:whichhe
frmlspeople
into
believing
his’ollzvr
1:/zzims‘.
although,
in
fact.
hekmmhs
nothingnfmugic
and
its
pIor:¢'dure.\.
...
The
tlzings
thathaw
beensaittabout
/mm-
sure.’
hunting]
haveno
scientffit:
Imvis,
norare
they
hosed
upon
[factual]iufnrmamm.
Irshrmldbe
realized
that
although
treasures
are
found.
this
happens
rarely
and
by
chance,
not
by
.\‘_v.s’lemau'<;
seurth... .Thosewho
aredt?ll.i(lé'i’/lor
afflizrled
by
[how
thmgs
nun!
(aka
refuge
inGm?
LAW 40
MONEYANDPOWER
In
therealm
of
power,everything
mustbe
judgedby
its
cost,
and
every-
thing
hasa
price.
Whatisofferedforfreeorat
bargain
ratesoftencomes
witha.
psychologicalpn’ce
tag—-complicated
feelings
of
obligation,
com-
promises
with
quality,
the
insecurity
those
compromisesbring,
onandon.
The
powerful
learn
early
to
protect
theirmostvaluableresources:
indepen-
denceandroomtomaneuver.
Bypaying
thefull
price,theykeep
them-
selvesfreeof
dangerousentanglements
andworries.
Beingopen
andflexiblewith
money
alsoteachesthevalueof
strategic
generosity,
avariationontheoldtrickof
“giving
when
you
areaboutto
take.”
Bygiving
the
appropriategift,youput
the
recipient
under
obliga-
tion.
Generosity
softens
peopleup——to
bedeceived.
Bygaining
a
reputa-
tion
for
liberality,you
win
people’:
admirationwhile
distracting
themfrom
yourpowerplays.Bystrategicallyspreadingyour
wealth,
you
charmthe
other
courtiers,
creatingpleasure
and
making
valuableallies.
Lookatthemastersof
power——the
Caesars,
the
Queen
Elizabeths,
the
Michelangelos,
theMecljcis:Notamiser
among
them.Eventhe
great
con
artists
spendfreely
to
swindle.
Tightpursestrings
areunattractive——when
engaged
in
seduction,
Casanovawould
give
completely
not
only
ofhimself
butofhiswallet.The
powerful
understandthat
money
is
psychologically
charged,
andthatitisalsoavesselof
politeness
and
sociability.They
make
thehumansideof
money
a
weapon
intheir
armory.
For
everyone
ableto
play
with
money,
thousands
moreare
locked
ina
self-destructiverefusaltouse
money
creatively
and
strategically.
These
typesrepresent
the
opposite
pole
tothe
powerful,
and
you
mustlearnto
recognize
them-——eithertoavoidtheir
poisonous
naturesortoturntheirin-
flexibility
to
youradvantage:
The
Greedy
Fish.The
greedy
fishtakethehumanside
out
of
money.
Coldand
ruthless,
they
see
only
thelifelessbalance
sheet;
viewing
others
solely
aseither
pawns
orobstructionsintheir
pursuit
of
wealth,
they
tram-
ple
on
people’s
sentimentsandalienatevaluableallies.Noonewanisto
workwiththe
greedy
fish,
andoverthe
years
they
end
up
isolated,
which
ofien
proves
their
undoing.
Greedy
fisharethecona.rtist’sbreadandbutter:Lured
by
thebaitof
easymoney,they
swallowtheruse
hook,line,
andsinker.
They
are
easy
to
deceive,
for
theyspend
somuch
time
dealing
with
numbers
(not
with
peer
ple)
that
they
become
blind
to
psychology,including
their
own.Either
avoidthembefore
theyexploityou
or
play
ontheir
greed
to
yourgain.
The
Bargain
Demon.Powerful
peoplejudgeeverythingby
whatit
costs,
not
just
in
money
butin
time,
dignity,
and
peace
ofmind.
And
thisis
ex»
actly
what
Bargain
Demonscannotdo.
Wasting
valuabletime
digging
for
bargains,theyworryendlessly
aboutwhat
they
couldhave
gotten
else
whereforalittleless.On
top
of
that,
the
bargain
item
they
do
buy
isoften
shabby;perhaps
itneeds
costlyrepairs,
orwillhavetobe
replaced
twiceas