Everyone can learn useful things from reading The Prince.
If war is deception, then who is it that is waging war against the Constitution and the American people?
Be assured that UTPD has always, and will always, respond to reports of an armed individual. Anytime you see a weapon on campus, you should call the police (9-1-1).
Basically, Bob Harkins, Assoc. VP for Campus Safety and Security is asking that everyone who insists on exercising their constitutional right be swatted.
Kinda looks like Jim Parsons of the Big Bang Theory.
When the Cambrian measures were forming, They promised perpetual peace.
They swore, if we gave them our weapons, that the wars of the tribes would cease.
But when we disarmed They sold us, and delivered us bound to our foe,
And the Gods of the Copybook Headings said: "Stick to the Devil you know."
He was a decent man and there is a sarcasm through the works. He wasn’t writing an instruction manual as simple people usually think. He was giving a very pointed description of what he saw happening everywhere around him in government at the time with popes, and in the city states.
But of course, saying that directly would have had him killed quickly.
He wasn’t a despot. Nobody send to notice that he didn’t follow his own blueprint. It’s as dumb to call him father of evil as it would be to think Screwtape letters means CS Lewis wanted to teach people how to destroy others.
In which he advised,"Keep an enemy at the city gates, even if you have to pay for him yourself". It still applies today, gun control, immigration,ISIS,etc. etc. etc.!
Thomas Cromwell, adviser to Henry VIII, was well-schooled in "The Prince" and was single-handedly responsible for the irreparable demise of the freedom of the English people.
The first group to write substantially against Machiavelli were the early Jesuits.
Our Founding Fathers studied both of Machaivelli's famous writings in order to know the depths of evil power and to build a nation that could be immune to it all.
Saul Alinsky used "The Prince" as his inspiration when writing his books for the 60s radicals.
The modern embodiment of the implementing Machiavelli's evil power is the 44th president of the United States.
Machiavelli wrote a number of lengthy books or discourses with “Discourses” in the title. The Prince was taken, largely, from Discourses on the Roman Republic.
Read it a million years ago in college. It was a dry but fascinating read. I would say that the much shorter book, The Prince, was a step-by-step blueprint for James Carville and Bill Clinton.
The much larger work, Discourses on the Roman Republic, fits Trump like a glove. The Prince pushes the subterfuge and “triangulation” aspects where “Discourses” actually pushes bold and brash leadership, nationalism and “fortuna,” letting the chips fall where they may (Trump’s banning muslims idea comes to mind), not to mention cowing your enemies (Trump does so verbally, Machiavelli would suggest mass execution among other things) and getting the peasants on your side.
Disarm private government police forces not authorized by any constituents.
Newspapers that publish legitimate gun owners' addresses, publish searchable databases of unmarked government vehicles for reporting public servants' misbehavior to their agencies' Risk Management.
Livy himself was exquisitely aware of the dangers of too much candor extolling the virtues of republicanism but he managed it anyway - during his lifetime even Augustus had to bow to the popular preference for the ancient Republic and pretend that his government was not imperial. Understand, though, that this form of Republic was not a popularly-elected government.
For a fuller sense of Machiavelli's actual views on government it is also helpful to read his Florentine Histories. He was certainly no academic or dilettante, but a practical politician whose own theory was hardened by experience.
The leaders of America’s enemies are quite well educated. They have read Machiavelli, Ayn Rand, and George Orwell, as thoroughly as have many conservatives. The difference is conservatives considers those books to be warnings, while big government liberals and other socialists consider them to be blueprints.
Since most Freepers don't bother to read beyond article titles, it is likely that few actually know firsthand of Machiavelli's works at all. With that in mind, and in Machiavelli's defense:
In his Discourses on Livy are lessons on how the Roman Republic survived for 400+ years. Subsequent philosophers like Locke and Sidney were well aware of his research. They in turn were influential on America's Founding and Framing generations.
Some of my favorite quotes:
“A covenant not to defend myself from force by force is always void. For, as I have shown before, no man can transfer or lay down his right to save himself from death, wounds, and imprisonment, the avoiding whereof is the only end of laying down any right; and therefore the promise of not resisting force, in no covenant transferreth any right, nor is obliging.”
Thomas Hobbes (1588â1679). Of Man, Being the First Part of Leviathan.
__________________________________________________________________________________
âFalse is the idea of utility that sacrifices a thousand real advantages for one imaginary or trifling inconvenience; that would take fire from men because it burns, and water because one may drown in it; that it has no remedy for evils, except destruction. The laws that forbid the carrying of arms are of such a nature. Such laws make things worse for the assaulted and better for the assailants; they serve rather to encourage than to prevent homicides, for an unarmed man may be attacked with greater confidence than an armed man.â
Cesare Beccaria On Crimes and Punishments (87-88)
__________________________________________________________________________________
âThe main foundations of every state, new states as well as ancient or composite ones, are good laws and good arms - you cannot have good laws without good arms, and where there are good arms, good laws inevitably follow.â
Niccolo Machiavelli
__________________________________________________________________________________
“that we may now give away, by a vote, what it may cost the dying groans of thousands to recover; that we may now surrender, with a little ink, what it may cost seas of blood to regain”
Thomas Treadwell