ทดสอบที่กำหนดเอง

LAW_3__24 by user654824

A tactic that is often effective in setting up a red herring is to appear to support an idea or cause that is actually contrary to your own sentiments. (Bismarck used this to great effect in is speech in 1850.) Most people will believe you have experienced a change of heart, since it is so unusual to play so lightly with something as emotional as one's opinions and values. The same applies for any decoyed object of desire: Seem to want something in which you are actually not at all interested and your enemies will be thrown off the scent, making all kinds of errors in their calculations.

LAW_3__23 by user654824

If you yearn for power, quickly lay honesty aside, and train yourself in the art of concealing your intentions. Master the art and you will always have the upper hand. Basic to an ability to conceal one's intentions is a simple truth about human nature: Our first instinct is to always trust appearances. We cannot go around doubting the reality of what we see and hear constantly imagining that appearances concealed something else would exhaust and terrify us. This fact makes it relatively easy to conceal one's intentions. Simple dangle an object you seem to desire, a goal you seem to aim for, in front of people's eyes and they will take the appearance for reality. Once their eyes focus on the decoy, they will fail to notice what you are really up to. In seduction, set up conflicting signals, such as desire and indifference, and you not only throw them off the scent, you inflame their desire to possess you.

LAW_3__22 by user654824

Keys To Power
Most people are open books. They say what they feel, blurt out their opinions at every opportunity, and constantly reveal their plans and intentions. They do this for several reasons. First, it is easy and natural to always want to talk about one's feelings and plans for the future. It takes effort to control your tongue and monitor what you reveal. Second, many believe that by being honest and open they are winning people's hearts and showing their good nature. They are greatly deluded. Honesty is actually a blunt instrument, which bloodies more than it cuts. Your honesty is likely to offend people; it is much more prudent to tailor your words, telling people what they want to hear rather than the coarse and ugly truth of what you feel or think. More important, by being unabashedly open you make yourself so predictable and familiar that it is almost impossible to respect or fear you, and power will not accrue to a person who cannot inspire such emotions.

LAW_3__21 by user654824

By being completely insincere and sending misleading signals, how-ever, he deceived everyone, concealed his purpose, and attained everything he wanted. Such is the power of hiding your intentions.

LAW_3__20 by user654824

Bismarck was certainly one of the cleverest statesman who ever lived, a master of strategy and deception. No one suspected what he was up to in this case. Had he announced his real intentions, arguing that it was better to wait now and fight later, he would not have won the argument, since most Prussians wanted war at that moment and mistakenly believed that their army was superior to the Austrians. Had he played up to the king, asking to be made a minister in exchange for supporting peace, he would not have succeeded either: The king would have distrusted his ambition and doubted his sincerity.

LAW_3__19 by user654824

Interpretation
At the time of his speech in 1850, Bismarck made several calculations. First, he sensed that the Prussian military, which had not kept pace with other European armies, was unready for war that Austria, in fact, might very well win, a disastrous result for the future. Second, if the war were lost and Bismarck had supported it, his career would be gravely jeopardized. The king and his conservative ministers wanted peace; Bismarck wanted power. The answer was to throw people off the scent by supporting a cause he detested, saying things he would laugh at if said by another. A whole country was fooled. It was because of Bismarck's speech that the king made him a minister, a position from which he quickly rose to be prime minister, attaining the power to strengthen the Prussian military and accomplish what he had wanted all along: the humiliation of Austria and the unification of Germany under Prussia's leadership.

LAW_3__18 by user654824

A few weeks after Bismarck's infamous speech, the king, grateful that he had spoken for peace, made him a cabinet minister. A few years later he became the Prussian premier. In this role he eventually led his country and a peace-loving king into a war against Austria, crushing the former empire and establishing a mighty German state, with Prussia at its head.

LAW_3__17 by user654824

Passionate patriot and lover of military glory, Bismarck nevertheless gave a speech in parliament at the height of the war fever that astonished all who heard it. "Woe unto the statesman," he said, "who makes war without a reason that will still be valid when the war is over! After the war, you will all look differently at these questions. Will you then have the courage to turn to the peasant contemplating the ashes of his farm, to the man who has been crippled, to the father who has lost his children?" Not only did Bismarck go on to talk of the madness of this war, but, strangest of all, he praised Austria and defended her actions. This went against everything he had stood for. The consequences were immediate. Bismarck was against the war what could this possibly mean? Other deputies were confused, and several of them changed their votes. Eventually the king and his ministers won out, and war was averted.

LAW_3__16 by user654824

This, after all, was the man who years later would say, "The great questions of the time will be decided, not be speeches and resolutions, but by iron and blood."

LAW_3__15 by user654824

Throughout his career, Bismarck had been a loyal, even passionate supporter of Prussian might and power. He dreamed of German unification, of going to war against Austria and humiliating the country that for so long had kept Germany divided. A former soldier, he saw warfare as a glorious business.

EE Olympics Event 1 by craigdmohan

Wi-Fi 7 is the latest in-home broadband technology and EE will be the first major Internet Service Provider to bring it to market. Enabling EE to bring our customers on our journey and allowing them to experience the best connectivity possible and allowing you to shout about EE being superior. As smart homes grow, intentionally or not, the Smart Hub Plus and Smart Wi-Fi Pro will help future-proof our customers as technology advances and more devices and services have Wi-Fi 7 technology. With Tri-Band allowing better speeds, the 6GHz band, is built for the newest devices that use Wi-Fi 6e/7 and applications. Our new Smart Wi-Fi Pro takes the power of Wi-Fi 7 and creates a seamless connection throughout the home. No more 'not spots' for the Wi-Fi. We’ll be offering the Smart Wi-Fi guarantee with this, which offers customers £100 refund if they cannot achieve 100Mbps on Wi-Fi 7 throughout the house.

EE Olympics Event 1 by craigdmohan

WiFi 7 is the latest in-home broadband technology and EE will be the first major Internet Service Provider to bring it to market. Enabling EE to bring our customers on our journey and allowing them to experience the best connectivity possible and allowing you to shout about EE being superior. As smart homes grow, intentionally or not, the Smart Hub Plus and Smart WiFi Pro will help future-proof our customers as technology advances and more devices and services have WiFI7 technology. With Tri-Band allowing better speeds, the 6GHz band, is built for the newest devices that use WiFi6e/7 and applications. Our new Smart WiFi Pro takes the power of WiFi 7 and creates a seamless connection throughout the home. No more 'not spots' for the WiFi. We’ll be offering the Smart WiFi guarantee with this, which offers customers £100 refund if they cannot achieve 100Mbps on WiFi 7 throughout the house.

EE Olympics Event 1 by craigdmohan

WiFi 7 is the latest in-home broadband technology and EE will be the first major Internet Service Provider to bring it to market. Enabling EE to bring our customers on our journey and allowing them to experience the best connectivity possible and allowing you to shout about EE being superior. As smart homes grow, intentionally or not, the Smart Hub Plus and Smart WiFi Pro will help future-proof our customers as technology advances and more devices and services have WiFI7 technology. With Tri-Band allowing better speeds, the 6GHz band, is built for the newest devices that use WiFi6e/7 and applications. Our new Smart WiFi Pro takes the power of WiFi 7 and creates a seamless connection throughout the home. No more 'not spots' for the WiFi. We’ll be offering the Smart WiFi guarantee with this, which offers customers £100 refund if they cannot achieve 100Mbps on WiFi 7 throughout the house. Customers taking a new package with WiFi 7, will help future-proof themselves. When customers upgrade to the latest mobile devices, these will more than likely have WiFi 7 compatibility. The next level of gaming consoles will also be using WiFi 7, you’ll be able to sell them on Tech from EE when they're released. Bring the customer on the journey, by being curious you can offer the relevant products and services to meet their needs. Unlocking WiFi 7 for everyone. Taking a package that’s WiFi 7 enabled now, will help customers when WiFi 7 becomes more mainstream, they’ll not have to worry about upgrading their broadband as well. This is just the start of what's coming with WiFi and the Smart Hub Pro, there's a host more features launching in the future so keep your eyes peeled for comms.

LAW_3__14 by user654824

Observance Of The Law
In 1850 the young Otto von Bismarck, then a thirty-five-year-old deputy in the Prussian parliament, was at a turning point in his career. The issues of the day were the unification of the many states (including Prussia) into which Germany was then divided, and a war against Austria, the powerful neighbor to the south that hoped to keep the Germans weak and at odds, even threatening to intervene if they tried to unite. Prince William, next in line to be Prussia's king, was in favor of going to war, and the parliament rallied to the cause, prepared to back any mobilization of troops. The only ones to oppose war were the present king, Frederick William IV, and his ministers, who preferred to appease the powerful Austrians.

LAW_3__13 by user654824

Do not be held a cheat, even though it is impossible to live today without being one. Let your greatest cunning lie in covering up what looks like cunning.

LAW_3__12 by user654824

The moment the marquis uttered that fatal word "love," however, all was changed. This was no longer a game with moves, it was an artless show of passion. His intention was revealed: He was seducing her. This put everything he had done in a new light. All that before had been charming now seemed ugly and conniving; the countess felt embarrassed and used. A door closed that would never open again.

LAW_3__11 by user654824

Imagine this story from the countess's perspective: After a few of the marquis's moves, she sensed the marquis was playing some sort of game, but the game delighted her. She did not know where he was leading her, but so much the better. His moves intrigued her, each of them keeping her waiting for the next one she even enjoyed her jealousy and confusion, for sometimes any emotion is better than the boredom of security. Perhaps the marquis had ulterior motives; most men do. But she was willing to wait and see, and probably if she had been made to wait long enough, what he was up to would not have mattered.

LAW_3__10 by user654824

Ninon knew that men and women are very different, but when it comes to seduction they feel the same: Deep down inside, they often sense when they are being seduced, but they give in because they enjoy the feeling of being led along. It is a pleasure to let go, and to allow the other person to detour you into a strange country. Everything in seduction, however, depends on suggestion. You cannot announce your intentions or reveal them directly in words. Instead you must throw your targets off the scent. To surrender to your guidance they must be appropriately confused. You have to scramble your signals appear interested in another man or woman (the decoy), then hint at being interested in the target, then feign indifference, on and on. Such patterns not only confuse, they excite.

LAW_3__9 by user654824

Interpretation
Ninon de Lenclos knew everything about the art of love. The greatest writers, thinkers, and politicians of the time had been her lovers men like LaRochefoucauld, Moliere, and Richelieu. Seduction was a game to her, to be practiced with skill. As she got older, and her reputation grew, the most important families in France would send their sons to her to be instructed in matters of love.

LAW_3__8 by user654824

A few days later the marquis was at the countess's home. They were alone. Suddenly he was a different man: This time acting on his own impulse, rather than following Ninon's instructions, he took the countess's hands and told her he was in love with her. The young woman seemed confused, a reaction he did not expect. She became polite, then excused herself. For the rest of the evening she avoided his eyes, was not there to say good-night to him. The next few times he visited he was told she was not at home. When she finally admitted him again, the two felt awkward and uncomfortable with each other. The spell was broken.