Captain Moroni was not fooled and wanted to make sure people remembered what they had fraught for. He tore off his clothes, wrote on them, "In memory of our God, our religion, our freedom. and our peace, our wives, and our children", and posted them on a pole with his helmet the top of the poll. He called this the Title of Liberty. I pictured this being similar to the picture of a soldier's rifle with the helmet on it.
As the chapters go though, Amalickah manages to win over a lot of people, but they get kicked out. He become the king over the Lamanites by using subtle deceptions to trick king Lehonti down from the mount and killed him. Then, the deceptions continued. Alma 47:30 says, "Amalickiah, by his fraud, gained the hearts of the people." Next, he had to win over the heart of the queen, which he does.
At this point, he is still not happy and wants more power, so he stirs things up between the Lamanites and the Nephites and sends his people out to war against the Nephites. The Nephites are prepared for such battles, however. Their cities are fortified so well that the Lamanites are unable to throw stones or shoot arrows. The Nephites "were prepared for them, in a manner which had never been known...to battle after the manner of instructions of Moroni." (Alma 49:8)
Hopefully, we can be as Captian Moroni who was "a strong and mighty man...of perfect understanding; yea, a man who did not delight in bloodshed; a man whose soul did joy in liberty and the freedom of his country...whose heart did swell with thanksgiving to his God;...a man who did labor exceedingly for the welfare and safety of his people. Yea, he was a man firm in the faith of Christ." (Alma 48:11-13) As the hymn says, we should "dare to do right, dare to be true." (Children's Song Book of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints, number 158)