While you may claim the title is tabloid-like, you are correct. The sad thing is, to some extent, that it is absolutely truthful. The Czech president’s chief of protocol had binges with cocaine snorted and male prostitutes (despite working for a president who wanted to be seen as conservative). When the affair came to light, the president defended the chief of protocol saying if everyone were so clever and educated, the society would look different. So is he the best citizen?
A chief of protocol should be invisible, but…
This unnamed chief of protocol was known to be visible during state ceremonies or state visits. Why do I highlight it? Because such people are invisible and should be so. Only in the Czech Republic.
He met the likes of Obama, Clinton, Putin and so on. And who was visible? The chief of protocol, not the statesman.
The best citizen: What does it mean education?
The aforementioned chief of protocol could recount dates, kings, and historical events through an evolutionary psychology lens—showing how politics reflects human instincts and survival strategies.
He knows that politics is full of patron-client relationships. And he knows that even his masters want to get rid of them, but people are people…
He lied, however, about his university degree. Still, with him as an average citizen, politics would stop to be rid of clientelism.
Does his affair really matter?
It should matter for those who call themselves conservatives? But since everything conservative is deceitful, nobody cared that he wasn’t persecuted.
But people were outraged that something like this had happened.
I do not support addiction, but in a reasonable society, this affair shouldn’t be an affair at all.
Where did he end up?
The so-called best citizen was allowed to hold some position in the institute of the former president.
It is all grotesque: some dubious party, such an outrage. However, he is vastly more politically literate than the average citizen.
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