"UNITED WE STAND, DIVIDED WE FALL"
"UNITED WE STAND, DIVIDED WE FALL," a favorite toast, in
varying forms, of political orators from Benjamin Franklin to Abraham Lincoln.
It gained recognition after John Dickinson's "Liberty Song" was
published on 18 July 1768, in the Boston Gazette. The work contained the lines:
Then join in hand, brave Americans all—
By uniting we stand, by dividing we fall!
The slogan regained widespread usage three-quarters of a century
later when the popular writer George Pope Morris's "The Flag of the
Union" appeared. The poem quoted the sentiment as given above, from the
motto of Kentucky, which had been adopted in 1792. Gaining new recognition
during times of national crisis.
Divide and Conquer
The phrase is attributed to Philip II, king of Macedon (382-336
BC), describing his policy toward the Greek city-states. In politics, divide
and rule (also known as divide and conquer) is referring to a strategy of
gaining and maintaining power based on the fact that many smaller opponents are
easier to manage than one larger one.
The strategy includes:
* breaking up power alliances into smaller chunks that are easier
to subdue/manage
* preventing small power groups from linking up and becoming more
powerful
Effective use of this technique allows those with limited power to
control those who collectively would have had a lot more influence.
Things Aren't Always What They Seem
“He who answers a matter before he hears the facts – it is folly
and shame to him.”
—
One afternoon, a small group of men were eating lunch at a private
golf club. All were members of the club, except for one. He was a guest – a
friend of one of the members.
As the men finished their meal, one of them pulled out of his
pocket a very rare coin that he had recently purchased. The man glowed with
excitement as he passed the precious coin around the table. Each man marveled
as they held the coin in their hand and heard the story behind it. The owner of
the coin shared that this was the only coin of its kind in existence, and he
purchased it at half the price of what it was worth.
Suddenly the coin disappeared. The owner asked what happened to
it. Each man swore that he had passed the coin to his neighbor. The last man
who was supposed to hold it denied having received it at all, and no one could
tell where it was now.
A hasty search was made; chairs were pulled away from the table,
the tablecloth was turned back, and each man stood up. But after 20 minutes of
frantic search, there was no place else to look.
The coin was gone.
“Someone here must have taken it,” blurted the owner, his pale
face turned red.
One of the men stood up and said: “We should all be searched. I
offer myself first.”
Every other man at the table promptly expressed his willingness to
be searched except one man – and he was not a member of the club. He was the
guest.
“I will not be searched,” he declared. “I haven’t stolen your
coin, so why should I be subjected to such an indignity?”
There was a storm of protest. Why shouldn’t he be willing if all
the others were? The guest shook his head. He didn’t care what the others did
or said. And he defied anyone to put a hand into his pockets.
One of the men said, “Then there’s only one thing left to do. No
one must leave this table until the police arrive.”
A very old waiter who was standing near the table had something on
his mind. He noticed that there was no pepper on one of the other tables. So he
asked to borrow the pepper from the table where all the controversy was focused
on. He lifted the pepper shaker from off the table, and to everyone’s shock,
there lay the missing coin!
The contention was over.
The owner of the coin asked the guest. “Why were you so stubborn
about being searched? Why did you refuse? What was the big deal?”
The guest breathed a sigh of relief and said, “No one would have
believed me, especially because I kept quiet in the beginning. The fact is, I
am also a collector of coins. And the coin that you have is not the only one in
existence. There is a duplicate that I bought two weeks ago in Paris. I thought
mine was the only one at the time. I brought it here to show everyone today.
It’s in my pocket right now. But I didn’t say anything about it because I
didn’t want to dampen your enthusiasm . . . Now who would have believed what I
just said 10 minutes ago?”
Each doubting member of the group looked at one another with
regret in their eyes.
Things aren’t always what they seem. It’s better to trust, even
though we are sometimes deceived, than to live lives of suspicion and
accusation.
Love doesn’t think the worst about others; it always thinks the
best.
"Things are not always what they seem; the first appearance
deceives many; the intelligence of a few perceives what has been carefully
hidden."
We are all members of our “Infinite Universal Family” held together
with “LOVE” indestructible cord of the “Creator,” “The Most High.”
“Least We Forget”
“Hallelujah!”
a shout of joy, praise, or gratitude.
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