24 April 2021 #MAGAanalysis

FDTD – Chapter 2: The Dangers of Negotiations

I'd have named this chapter differently. I'd have called it:

The Strengths, Weaknesses, & Power of Negotiation

Names aside, this chapter is one of the finest presentations on negotiation I've read. ImageImageImageImage
2) I can, however, make his case for the title he chose. Let me put the danger like so:

When Negotiation = Capitulation...DON'T DO IT!

For Sharp, political freedom is the greatest treasure in this world. It demands fierce commitment and readiness to make sacrifice.
3) My own case is this. Every form of combat or cooperation entails negotiations, whether we call them that or not. I say that if we're bold enough to embrace non-violent, legal, political resistance, then we can trust ourselves to negotiate without capitulation.
4) Alas, his first point in this chapter is so spot on, I likely have to surrender to his tone. People, after fighting, often revert back into passive submission, and often, the place that occurs is in the negotiation process. He is just so right about that.
5) On page 19, Sharp gives us a righteous example, and for him, the ONLY righteous example of negotiation with dictators. How can we organize safe passage to an international airport for you? That is a conversation Sharp embraces with his whole heart and soul.
6) Let's look at page 19 in full. Only on my second reading, I don't recall if there is an equal moment anywhere else in his book. But on this page, we have caution that rises to the very level of Machiavelli. Image
7) Negotiation with a dictator does not turn on Truth, Justice, the American Way, or by any other valued good. It turns on the balance of power capacity, as Sharp calls it. Which side has greater power? That is the ultimate factor driving negotiation outcomes. Period.
8) Sharp does not use the word "naive." I do. The real basis of negotiation weakness is the failure to recognize power as the pivotal component. I have an anecdote to share on point. It's about one of recruiting clients who once negotiated with Donald Trump and lost.
9) My client had the perfect candidate for an opening in the Trump outfit, and at the stage of making an offer, they met to discuss the next steps. Trump said, I'm ready to hire your candidate but I will not pay your full fee. Half of your fee is the highest I'll go.
10) My client buckled and cut her fee in half in order to close the deal. When she told me about this, she was explaining how she hated Trump because that was such an unfair thing to do. So, I asked her, why didn't you walk about of the negotiation? Why not just hold fast?
11) Honorably, she felt that this was in fact the best job her candidate would find. Also, even at half her fee, the raw dollars were too appealing to walk away from. She capitulated and was happy, but yet she still hated Trump for his unfair tactics.
12) Had I been coaching her at the time I'd have counseled walk away. You don't know if Trump will pay full fee or not if you capitulate. You don't know if he'd accept a 90% fee offer from you, or anything north of the 50% you accepted. This was a dangerous negotiation, indeed.
13) We might call it the Sharp/Trump Doctrine that many times:

The best deal of all is...NO DEAL.

If you don't have the strength to walk away, you really aren't negotiating. You're capitulating but likely not calling it that.
14) Following Sharp's view of danger, he teaches us that dictators are always violent, and have control of the weapons of the state at his disposal. The only answer to this disparity is non-violent resistance. For the non-violent negotiator to win, this must be understood.
15) Sharp give us this quote: "For the tyrant has the power to inflict only that which we lack the strength to resist." You can find the quote on page 264 of this free book. It's powerful material.

archive.org/details/in.ern…
16) This is an absolutely PERFECT description of exactly HOW we lost America to its enemies within. We walk into the negotiating room unprepared, oblivious of our own weaknesses, equally oblivious of our opponent's strengths. Now that's dangerous and we see the results, today.
17) Let's look at Sharp's caution another way. Political Defiance is:

THE MOST POWERFUL MEANS AVAILABLE TO THOSE STRUGGLING FOR FREEDOM.

What he's telling is that weak negotiations always occur in the context of a failure of political will, the will required to defy the enemy.
18) The great point of this chapter is that there ARE other options for those who want BOTH peace AND freedom. He warns us that negotiations are, essentially the surrender of the very weapon that empowered us in the first place:

Legal, Non-violent Political Defiance.
19) I can hear you asking, but what about evil laws and the Civil Disobedience that our morality demands of us? In a word, Political Defiance can incorporate what the state calls illegal when the law dictates wrong action. An example can easily be found from our Civil War.
20) So much of the debate leading up to open hostilities revolved interstate travel with one's slaves, as well as the policies of free states in response to escaped slaves and their return to their masters. Our Underground Railroad was 100% illegal AND 100% righteous, both.
21) Our abolitionists knew that there was no negotiating with the laws, establishments, or proponents of slavery. That very non-negotiation was what ultimately led to the war, finally, after 72 years under the evil laws protecting that evil institution.
22) So please be clear, neither Sharp nor I urge obedience to evil laws. And we both encourage precisely that analysis. Civil disobedience, however, is NOT the focus of either this chapter or of the book itself. Non-violent Political Defiance is the focus.
23) On that note, let's turn to Kindle reading, or any digital book platform, and discuss the new power these instruments give us. This morning, I did this search on my laptop Kindle. I consider this to be very important, and not possible otherwise. Image
24) In the upper left corner of the image, you'll see that Sharp uses the term "political defiance" 56 times in this book. The first few are in the Table of Contents. The first use in the text occurs at the end of chapter 1, on page 13. Each is important.
25) But it is here in chapter 2 that we begin to get the sense of what Sharp is really trying to show us and teach us it's power and use. Following just this one term through the book is so powerful! Do the same search I did, on Political Defiance.

aeinstein.org/wp-content/upl…
26) I have to put all this in my terms, now. We have been wimps, unwilling to pay the price of freedom, to make the sacrifices required. We have allowed America's internal enemies to own the field of fight. We have failed to bring the fight to them.
27) With Sharp's help, I think I finally understand why we have failed so utterly. We don't have the vision of peace AND freedom. For us, freedom requires a fight we cannot win, and forces us to break the law. It would cost us our peace, we unconsciously believe.
28) But this is not true. Legal, non-violent political defiance will win us this war. As we'll see, we must organize. We must attain MASS political defiance. In my own state's Constitution, a majority are specifically empowered to alter our government at will.
29) "...whenever any government shall be found inadequate or contrary to these purposes, a majority of the community hath an indubitable, inalienable, and indefeasible right to reform, alter, or abolish it, in such manner as shall be judged most conducive to the public weal."
30) If we are going to negotiate, at all, let us do so with our true power in mind. That, by the way is the very topic of chapter 3 which we'll discuss tomorrow. Today, go read mine, and also your own state's constitution. We do have the ultimate power.

law.lis.virginia.gov/constitutionfu…
Thread ends at #30.

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More from @ThyConsigliori

27 Apr
27 April 2021 #MAGAanalysis

FDTD – Chapter 3: Whence Comes the Power – Part 3

We won't have time to get today's analysis done in the morning. I hate that, but I will get it done later today. Diving in, we have two of the hardest passages of the New Testament to contemplate. ImageImage
2) Here's a single verse to capture the horrendous point:

Luke 14: 26

If any man come to me, and hate not his father, and mother, and wife, and children, and brethren, and sisters, yea, and his own life also, he cannot be my disciple.
3) If I have the time, later today, I'll look up this verse in Strong's Concordance and find the Greek or Aramaic word translated into the term "hate." Turning to the original language always helps. But, simply hearing it in King James English matters, also.
Read 6 tweets
26 Apr
26 April 2021 #MAGAanalysis

FDTD – Chapter 3: Whence Comes the Power – Part 2

Although I knew it before, I learned all over again this morning why authors so often write their books sitting inside a fabulous library somewhere. I spend a lot of money on books but NOT this much! ImageImageImageImage
2) Today's essay is constructed around Sharp's footnote numbers 8, 9, & 10. The bad news is that I was unable to find either free online PDFs or inexpensive copies of Deutsch or Machiavelli. The good news is I found a $1.20 version of Austin!
3) Sometimes, just having the paragraph before and the paragraph following a given quote transforms your understanding of the quote itself. It's more than just context, it's also momentum. What is the author's real goal, his destination? What are his values and assumptions?
Read 21 tweets
25 Apr
25 April 2021 #MAGAanalysis

FDTD – Chapter 3: Whence Comes the Power?

Once again, I'd change the Chapter title. I'd put "cometh" in place of "comes." For those who believe in Divine Law, power cometh from God. Nice King James feel, right? And what a question! ImageImageImageImage
2) I haven't decided yet if I can get away with just one essay on this chapter, or if more may be needed. I can tell you this, you WANT to read along with me. Sharp is a strategic writer, and this chapter is a strategic turning point in the book.
3) While I read this chapter the 1st time some weeks back, I wasn't surprised but I was pleased that Sharp quotes my man Machiavelli. This is positively (maybe even dispositively) Sharp's true Machiavellian chapter. Had to look that up. Dispositive means settled, not in dispute.
Read 21 tweets
23 Apr
23 April 2021 #MAGAanalysis

FDTD – Chapter 12: Facing Dictatorships Realistically

I was able to get my study in last night and identified 4 key thoughts to underline. Here are the shots of all 4. We'll walk through them below.
2) Dictatorships collapse when subjects confront them with adequate force. While they're often thought of as impregnable, they can't withstand concerted political, economic, and social defiance. Let's add, by non-violent legal means.
3) In the light of the Election Steal of 2020, it was hard for me to read this chapter focusing on my own county. The DC Swamp is 100% dependent upon our silent complicity, our complete complacency, that I just couldn't read this without my nation as a whole in mind.
Read 26 tweets
22 Apr
22 April 2021 #MAGAanalysis

FDTD – The Preface Can Be The Most Personal Part

Prefaces and Forewords are almost always written after the book has been completed. How do you know what you're going to say before you've said it? These two quotes are from Sharp's Preface.
2) Points:

* The prevention of tyranny might be possible
* Successful struggles against dictatorships could be waged
* And waged without mutual slaughter
* Dictatorships could be destroyed
* New dictatorships could be prevented from rising out of the ashes of the old
3) Points:

* The fall of one regime does not bring a utopia
* Hard work and long efforts follow
* The goal is more just social, economic, and political relationships
* The goal is the eradication of other forms of injustices and oppression
Read 21 tweets
21 Apr
21 April 2021 #MAGAanalysis

FDTD – Chapters 6 & 7: What and How

It wasn't a true read but not merely an advanced skim. I was able to take in both chapters 6 & 7 and now have the answer as to why they're two chapters, not one. Calculation played an important, if erroneous part.
2) As spelling is to reading and writing, counting is to calculation and mathematical analysis. I have suffered terrible capabilities in both spelling and counting for my entire life. Just yesterday, I demonstrated the same failure all over again.
3) I've made the precise same mistake before many times. Consider the page count in a chapter of a book. If, like me, you take the first page of the next chapter and subtract from it the first page of the previous chapter, you get an erroneous page count for the chapter, by one.
Read 32 tweets

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