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Veni Vidi Vici Roger Stone

World Wars of the Modern Era

 

All Sides Batting for the Same Team

 

‘In Hoc Signo Vinces’

 

In These Signs (We) Conquer

 

Veni Vidi Vici

We Came We Saw We Conquered

We Came We DiVided We Ruled...

 

DiVide is the same in Latin and English

 

The Compass and Squarers

The Dividers and Rulers

Roman Empire Tactics

 

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Divide and rule policy (Latin: divide et impera), or divide and conquer, in politics and sociology is gaining and maintaining power by breaking up larger concentrations of power into pieces that individually have less power than the one implementing the strategy.

 

The use of this technique is meant to empower the sovereign to control subjects, populations, or factions of different interests, who collectively might be able to oppose its rule. Niccolò Machiavelli identifies a similar application to military strategy, advising in Book VI of The Art of War (1521). (L'arte della guerra): a Captain should endeavor with every act to divide the forces of the enemy. Machiavelli advises that this act should be achieved either by making him suspicious of his men in whom he trusted, or by giving him cause that he has to separate his forces, and, because of this, become weaker.

 

The maxim divide et impera has been attributed to Philip II of Macedon. It was utilised by the Roman ruler Julius Caesar and the French emperor Napoleon (together with the maxim divide ut regnes).

 

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Uploaded on February 15, 2022