Among them, "inaction" means: let nature take its course and govern by doing nothing.
Among them, "inaction" means: nothing is impossible, nothing is impossible.
Idleness is the root:
"Tao often does nothing and does nothing" comes from the thirty-seventh chapter of Laozi's Tao Te Ching.
Doing nothing without exception is the original text:
Tao always does nothing and does everything. If Hou Wang can keep it, everything will change itself. If you want to do it, I'll make the town nameless, the town nameless, and my husband won't. If you don't want to be quiet, the world will decide.
Do nothing, do nothing is the original translation:
Tao always obeys nature and does nothing, but there is nothing it doesn't do. If the marquis can become a political citizen according to the principle of Tao, then everything will be self-educated, self-protected and fully developed. When I am born with greed, I will use Tao to curb it. If we convince it with the truth of Tao, there will be no greed. There must be no greed in everything, and the world will naturally achieve stability and peace.