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As a former boy, I happen to be an expert on this topic. So here's a good reading list that skips the trivialities and gets you directly to the true knowledge of that awful beast.
These on their own should, if you internalize their lessons, dispel idealisms and make you a dangerous politician.
I expect a lot of this thread to worry about the moral question, about what to do about and with power. But for that question to be relevant, one must acquire and wield it first, and understand how it really works.
Most people don't read classical literature (including nonfiction) except for a specific reason, usually school. The size of the population, let alone the size of the young male population, who'd 1) consider reading such things to not be boring drudgework and 2) actually get anything out of them is tiny. Reading such things is no longer considered high status in our society anyway. It doesn't matter whether you personally read them as a boy and found them useful; typical-minding is a thing.
What they should read, or watch, is a variety of things that they mostly read or watch for other reasons, but which have the occasional bit about using power properly because the idea is in the zeitgeist so writers naturally put it in their works every so often. And the only way you're going to get that to happen is to restructure society first. (Although there's an interesting conversation in Fate/Zero.)
Your list is useless unless a boy actually comes up to you and says "I'd like to read some classical literature about exercising power, what do you recommend?" In which case, recommend away, but that won't happen much. It's the political science equivalent of "how do I get my child interested in programming computers?" To which the answer is "You don't, most people are not interested in that."
If there were a fictional series that compiled all this forbidden knowledge in a compelling narrative, I'd recommend that. But that does not exist. The best you get is dramatic tidbits of Machiavelli and maybe eternal truths carried through collective unconscious and archetypes, in say, Tolkien or Death Note.
If there are any artists looking for ideas, here's a under exploited gold mine of narrative tension though.
Tis true, not many have the stomach to learn how to succeed at politics. But I would actually dispute boys can't be made to read this stuff not because I did it, nor because they did the equivalent for decades but because PewDiePie had an ongoing book club with similar tomes and I know for a fact a decent amount of people followed along.
A "decent number of people" out of the size of the Internet is a tiny number of people.
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I'd never heard of "The Mind and Society" so I had a poke about. https://blackwells.co.uk/bookshop/search/author/Vilfredo%20Pareto are selling a new copy for £26. But wait, that is only volume 1. Where is volume 2? Checking https://archive.org/details/ParetoTheMindAndSocietyVol4TheGeneralFormOfSociety/Pareto%20-%20The%20Mind%20and%20Society%20Vol%204%3B%20The%20General%20Form%20of%20Society/page/n11/mode/2up?view=theater there are four volumes, a total of 1900 pages. Pareto seems to be stacking his concepts, maths style, with Greek letter names.
My Dover edition of The Prince runs to 71 pages of ordinary English. Brevity and language make it accessible to a boy, even if the topic does not. But is "The Mind and Society" not a little heavy going?
He's wordier than I like, but the whole psychological model of tendencies within society and the theory of residues is a valuable insight that you won't substantially find in other authors.
I'll easily concede a boy would benefit from the cliff notes version of all these. Which thankfully does exist in Parvini's The Populist Delusion. But it's still an overview rather than the thing in itself.
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