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The president America needs is, unfortunately, Czech, and the Constitution rules him out. He is also, sadly for the world, dead. Václav Havel, playwright and leader of those who opposed the Czechoslovakian communist regime — and went to prison for it several times — was elected the free nation's first president after the 1989 "velvet revolution," in which the regime just gave up. He served his nation as president from 1989 to 2003, and died in 2011.
A few days ago, after reading through lots of news about current American politics, I came upon Havel's memoir "To the Castle and Back" in a thrift store. Fifty pages in, I thought, "Why can't we have a president like this?"
One of the great men of this and the last century, Havel actually thought about the world and what was right to do, and not just what would get him what he wanted. And one of those right things to do, probably the most important thing to do, was to tell the truth, all the time and even when you wanted to hide it. Which would be a great thing in an American president. But.
Donald Trump lies like the rest of us breathe. He differs from his peers in presidential politics in degree, not in kind. He lies more blatantly, more carelessly, more contemptuously, but politics provides many different ways to lie.
A politician can lie directly, or he can twist the narrative in his own favor. Dodging questions and controlling events so no one can challenge the message, for one. Turning every important question into an excuse to play to a culture-warring audience, for another. Promising great things you know you can't achieve, for a third. Everyone does it.
In his first major address as president of Czechoslovakia, Havel told the people, "I assume you did not propose me for this office so that I, too, would lie to you." As far as I can find, he didn't.