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Wit & Attitude Quote by Louis L'Amour

"A wise man fights to win, but he is twice a fool who has no plan for possible defeat"

About this Quote

L'Amour’s line reads like frontier pragmatism distilled into a single warning: bravery is cheap, logistics are everything. The “wise man” still fights “to win” because ambition and resolve are non-negotiable virtues in L'Amour’s world. But the sting comes in the pivot: “twice a fool.” Not just wrong, not just naive - doubly culpable. One kind of foolishness is believing you can control outcomes through sheer will. The second is refusing to imagine the moment will fails.

The subtext is less about pessimism than about adult competence. Planning for defeat isn’t surrender; it’s respect for reality’s indifference. L'Amour wrote in a cultural landscape that prized self-reliance and heroic decisiveness - the mid-century Western mythos where men improvise their way out of trouble and moral clarity carries the day. This sentence quietly revises that mythology. It suggests the true mark of strength is the ability to rehearse humiliation, loss, and retreat without losing your identity.

Notice how the quote frames “defeat” as “possible,” not inevitable. It leaves room for optimism, but only the kind that survives contact with consequences. In modern terms, it’s an argument against performative confidence: don’t confuse swagger with strategy. Whether the fight is literal, political, professional, or personal, L'Amour’s ethic is clear: betting everything on a single outcome isn’t courage - it’s gambling with other people’s lives, including your future self.

Quote Details

TopicWisdom
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Louis Lamour on Strategy and Contingency
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About the Author

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Louis L'Amour (March 22, 1908 - June 10, 1988) was a Author from USA.

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