This post was written on 6/18/2026.
There is a scene in One Piece that does not have a lot of explosions. Nobody gets sent flying through a wall. No Haki crackles in the air. No finishing move is declared. And yet, for anyone who has ever been tested by someone who simply was not worth their time, the Mocktown bar scene on the island of Jaya might be the most quietly powerful moment in the entire series. Luffy and Zoro sit there, drinks in hand, while Bellamy and his crew hurl insults at them, laugh at their dreams, and make a spectacle of themselves in front of everyone in that bar. And Luffy does not move. Zoro does not move. They absorb it all like stone, pay the jeering absolutely no mind, and walk away without throwing a single punch. Not out of fear. Not out of weakness. But because those people simply were not worth the energy.
I thought about that scene today. I thought about it on the New York City subway, of all places, while a group of rowdy young people — teenagers or maybe barely adults, it was hard to tell and honestly irrelevant — decided that I was going to be their entertainment for a few stops.
It started the way these things always start: with noise. One of them had an air horn. An actual air horn, the kind you take to a sporting event, now deployed in an enclosed metal tube underground for the purpose of annoying strangers on a Thursday afternoon. They were loud, they were laughing at their own antics, and then they turned their attention toward me specifically. Insults started flying. Comments designed to get under my skin, to make me react, to give them the little dopamine hit of knowing they had gotten to somebody. The air horn went off a couple more times for good measure. Classic stuff, really. A performance in search of an audience.
And I gave them nothing.
Not a glance. Not a sigh. Not a twitch of irritation. Not even the subtle satisfaction of watching me look away deliberately, which would itself have been a reaction and therefore a kind of victory for them. I sat there the way you sit when the thing making noise is a jackhammer outside your window — mildly aware of it, completely unaffected by it, already thinking about something else. Because here is the honest truth: it did not feel worth the effort or the time to pay them any mind whatsoever. The calculus was simple and it resolved in about two seconds. These were not people whose opinions of me could mean anything. They were not a threat that required my attention or my preparation. They were noise. And you do not negotiate with noise.
What I was doing, without consciously naming it in that moment, was the Mocktown Principle.
Go back to Jaya. Bellamy the Hyena was not a small obstacle. Within the world of One Piece at that point in the story, he was a formidable pirate with a 55 million berry bounty, which in those early arcs was genuinely impressive. His crew was loyal and vicious. He held real social power in Mocktown, a place where the ruthless survived and the dreamers were mocked. When he started in on Luffy and Zoro — sneering at their dreams of finding Sky Island, calling them fools chasing myths, getting his whole crew to laugh along with him — he was doing exactly what bullies have always done: performing cruelty in front of an audience, hoping to break someone down and enjoy the breaking.
And Luffy, who has punched literal sea monsters and gone to war with the most powerful forces in the world, just sat there and drank. Zoro, who has stared down death with his swords sheathed and his arms folded, did not even look at them. It was not passivity out of fear. It was something far more deliberate and far more devastating: a refusal to grant these people the significance they were demanding.
That is the key thing. What Bellamy wanted — what he needed, psychologically, from that interaction — was a reaction. He wanted Luffy to get angry. He wanted Zoro to reach for a sword. He wanted the whole bar to see him make these newcomers flinch, because that would have confirmed his worldview that dreamers are weak and he is strong. The performance only works if the target participates. Luffy and Zoro understood, consciously or not, that the most effective response to someone performing cruelty for an audience is to decline to be in their show.
That is exactly what happened on the train today.
The air horn crowd was running a performance. They wanted eyes. They wanted energy. They wanted someone to get flustered, or angry, or scared, or to try to say something back and then get laughed at harder. The whole social dynamic they were creating required a willing participant on the other side. And I was not interested in being that participant. So I just was not. I looked at my phone or the middle distance or whatever it is you look at when you are purposefully inhabiting your own world, and I let them perform into a void.
And here is what happens when you do that: they look ridiculous. Not to themselves, maybe — they were having a great time, fueled by each other’s laughter and the sugar rush of chaos. But to everyone else on that train, and I noticed this, the other passengers were doing the same thing I was. Nobody was engaging. People were looking at their books, their headphones, their windows. A few were making that micro-expression New Yorkers have perfected over decades of subway life, the one that says I see this, I am cataloguing it, and I am choosing not to care. The whole car was collectively deciding, without conferring, that this group of people making noise were not worth the oxygen. And that is exactly what they looked like: kids making themselves look like idiots in front of a crowd that had unanimously decided to stop watching.
It is worth being honest about the physical piece of this. In the Mocktown scene, Luffy and Zoro do not fight Bellamy that day. They leave. And later, when they are forced into conflict, Luffy handles it with one punch and does not even look proud about it. The restraint was not because they were incapable of fighting. It was because fighting Bellamy was not worth what it would cost them in time and energy and focus, not when they had a sky island to find.
On the train, I want to be clear: I was not scared. I assessed the situation the way you do when something unexpected happens in a public space, quickly and honestly. These were kids with an air horn. They were disruptive and obnoxious, but they were not escalating toward anything that felt genuinely dangerous. If something physical had happened, I would have defended myself, full stop. Self-defense is not the same as taking bait. There is a difference between rising to provocation designed to get a reaction and responding to an actual threat. I was ready to do the second thing if it became necessary. It did not become necessary. What they were offering was purely the first thing, bait on a hook, and I had no interest in biting.
The Mocktown Principle is not about being passive or conflict-averse in some general philosophical sense. Luffy is not passive. He fights constantly. He is one of the most confrontational characters in anime. But he fights for things that matter to him — his crew, his friends, his dream, his freedom. He does not spend his energy on people who cannot threaten those things. And Bellamy, for all his bluster and his bounty, could not threaten what Luffy actually cared about. He was just a loud guy in a bar. The air horn kids on the train were just loud kids on a train. Noise, in both cases. And you do not fight noise.
There is something freeing about this framework, actually. Most of us spend a lot of mental energy on people like this — processing the insult, wondering if we should have said something, replaying the moment and imagining the perfect response. We feel, on some level, like not reacting means we lost. Like we should have defended ourselves. But what, exactly, would we have been defending against? Someone called you a name on the subway. Someone sneered at your dream in a pirate bar on an island full of criminals. What does fighting that accomplish, other than giving the performance what it needed to succeed?
The Mocktown scene is a lesson in what maturity looks like when it is not performing itself. Maturity is not about having the best comeback. It is not about showing everyone how unbothered you are in a way that is itself a show. It is about genuinely not caring, genuinely not being disturbed, and then moving on with your life toward the things that actually matter to you. Luffy walked out of that bar and kept thinking about the sky. I sat on that train and kept doing whatever I was doing before the air horn. That is the whole thing. That is the entire move.
What strikes me about both situations, looking back, is how the same dynamic plays out regardless of scale or fictional stakes. Bellamy had a crew and a reputation and a bar full of people watching. The train kids had each other and an air horn and a subway car full of strangers. The intention was identical: manufacture a confrontation, extract a reaction, feel powerful by making someone else feel small. And the defense against it is identical too — just genuinely not give it to them. Not as a strategy, not as a power move, not as a calculated display of superiority, but as the honest expression of the fact that some things simply are not worth your attention.
I think there is also something specifically New York about the way this played out. This city has a particular collective wisdom about public nuisance. You develop it riding the subway for years. There are things that happen on trains that would be genuinely alarming if they happened, say, in your office or a quiet restaurant, but in the context of the subway they are just part of the ambient texture of city life. A performer, a preacher, someone having a very loud phone conversation, a group of kids with an air horn. The city teaches you to calibrate your alarm responses carefully, to reserve actual concern for actual threats, and to develop an extremely thick outer layer of I am not participating in whatever this is. The other riders on that train today had clearly received that same education. We were all, collectively, Luffy and Zoro at the bar.
And the kids made themselves look like idiots. Not to anyone who mattered to them, probably. Their audience was each other, and in that sense they had a great time. But from where the rest of us were sitting, they were a minor, forgettable disruption in an otherwise ordinary commute, remembered only because the contrast was interesting — a group of people demanding to be seen, surrounded by people who had looked away in unison.
Bellamy, too, probably felt like he had won something in that Mocktown bar. He got his laughs. His crew cheered him on. He ran Luffy and Zoro out of the place and told himself a story about dreamers and weakness. And then Luffy found the sky island. And the log pose and the rubber man were remembered, and Bellamy faded, as all performers eventually do when no one is left in the audience.
The train pulled into my stop. I got off. The air horn faded behind me as the doors closed. I kept walking, already thinking about something else.
