У нас вы можете посмотреть бесплатно STOP LYING TO YOURSELF! — Machiavelli’s Brutal Warning или скачать в максимальном доступном качестве, видео которое было загружено на ютуб. Для загрузки выберите вариант из формы ниже:
Если кнопки скачивания не
загрузились
НАЖМИТЕ ЗДЕСЬ или обновите страницу
Если возникают проблемы со скачиванием видео, пожалуйста напишите в поддержку по адресу внизу
страницы.
Спасибо за использование сервиса ClipSaver.ru
You've Been LYING to Yourself (And It's DESTROYING YOU) - Niccolo Machiavelli The most dangerous lies are not the ones people tell you. They are the ones you whisper to yourself. Machiavelli understood this centuries ago. He saw men fall not because of their enemies, but because of their illusions. They refused to see clearly. They clung to comforting lies instead of facing brutal truths. And today, most people are still doing the same. They tell themselves they are disciplined while wasting hours on distractions. They tell themselves they are ambitious while settling for mediocrity. They tell themselves they are good people while allowing others to walk over them. These lies destroy you silently. They rot your drive, weaken your will, and blind you to the strategies that could make you powerful. What Machiavelli revealed is not pleasant. He forced us to see the world without illusions. He showed that power belongs to those who deal in reality, not fantasy. That the man who lies to himself does not need an enemy—he is already defeated. In the popular imagination, Machiavelli has become synonymous with cruelty and manipulation. But that is a misunderstanding. He was not advocating evil. He was exposing the truth about how the world actually works. And at the heart of that truth lies a disturbing observation: the very traits we associate with good people—honesty, transparency, compassion—are often the same traits that make them vulnerable. It is not goodness that is punished. It is naivety. Machiavelli observed that men are simple and inclined to obey immediate needs, so a deceiver will never lack victims. The world does not bend to virtue. It bends to power. And power often belongs not to those who deserve it, but to those who understand how to take it. You see this everywhere. In politics, the leader who tells the people only what they want to hear often wins over the one who tells them what they need to hear. In business, the ruthless CEO admired as a “visionary” often outmaneuvers and buries the honest operator. In relationships, the one who holds back, who maintains mystery, who never fully reveals themselves—often commands more respect and desire than the one who gives freely, loves openly, and hopes to be chosen for being kind. This is not fair. But fairness was never the game. Influence, control, survival—these are the true currencies of power. And good people, for all their virtues, often lack the discipline to trade in them. They talk too much. They believe in transparency. They reveal their hearts, their thoughts, their plans, believing it will earn trust. But speech creates commitments. It binds you, exposes you, and gives others the tools to manipulate you. Silence, on the other hand, creates freedom. Strategic silence is the fortress of the wise. Good people also assume others are like them. They believe intentions matter more than outcomes. But Machiavelli wrote that men judge more by the eye than by the hand, because it belongs to everybody to see, but to few to feel. Appearances, not intentions, shape perception. You may intend kindness, but if you appear weak, the world will treat you accordingly. You may mean no harm, but if you lack control, others will impose their will on you. The more noble your motives, the more others will assume you are safe to challenge. Because you will not strike first. You will hesitate. You will forgive. You will explain. And in that pause, you lose. Not always dramatically, but quietly, until your relevance fades and your voice softens. The world moves on to listen to someone louder, colder, bolder. This is the tragedy Machiavelli recognized. In a world built on perception and strategy, good people rarely win because they refuse to see clearly. They cling to ideals in a world that rewards outcomes. They chase admiration when they should pursue respect. They hope to be chosen instead of choosing their path with ruthless clarity. He would not tell you to abandon your values. But he would urge you to protect them with strategy, discipline, and restraint. Even the noblest prince must imitate the fox as well as the lion—the fox to detect traps, the lion to frighten wolves. Without cunning, goodness becomes bait. Without strength, compassion becomes a cage. If you want to win, goodness must be sharpened, not shared. Guarded, not given away. Delivered through action, not explanation. The world may not be just. But with the right mindset, you can still win within it. Like this video, subscribe for more, and share this message if you know someone still living in illusions. Comment below: I refuse to lie to myself. Let’s see who here is ready to face reality with Machiavellian clarity. #machiavelli #power #psychology #philosophy