Get all-access to Lincoln Square content, and to help us amplify the content that you’re reading to Americans who aren’t paying attention, please consider upgrading your subscription today with this limited-time offer: The Lie that Feels Like HopeWhen any politician promises to save you alone, they’re playing the autocrat’s game.
By Trygve Olson This is the sixth in an eight-part series on the lessons I’ve learned confronting autocrats over the past twenty-five years. From post-Soviet capitals to American battlegrounds, I’ve seen how authoritarianism grows — and how democracy survives. Here’s the most challenging part to accept: Authoritarians win — for a time — because their lies are easier to live with than the truth. I’ve worked in countries where regimes collapsed economies, jailed dissenters, and destroyed futures. And yet, millions still cheered them on. Why? Because autocrats offer something democracy doesn’t: clarity without complexity, identity without introspection, loyalty without question The truth is messy. Democracy demands responsibility. Authoritarianism demands only belief. Autocrats don’t just lie. They simplify. And in a chaotic world, that simplicity becomes all the more seductive. It doesn’t matter whether they come from the political left or the right — when a leader says “I alone can fix it”, they’re not offering a solution. They’re issuing an ultimatum. They’re not debating policy. They’re constructing a cult of control. This isn’t new. I’ve seen it in Serbia when Milosevic stoked ethnic nationalism. I’ve seen it in Russia when Putin blamed “the West” for every domestic failure. I’ve seen it in Venezuela, Hungary, and Turkey. And now I see it creeping across democracies where disillusionment makes people vulnerable to manipulation. These aren’t policy debates. Their identity plays. And once a political identity fuses with personal identity, the lie becomes sacred. To question it is to ask yourself. That’s how they win. The media often treats this like a fact-checking exercise. But you can’t counter emotional propaganda with PDFs and corrections. You have to understand the deeper seduction: authoritarian lies don’t persuade — they protect. They protect people from doubt. From complexity. From the fear that nobody’s really in charge. Which is why our fight isn’t just about truth. It’s about meaning. We have to offer an honest narrative, but also a hopeful one. One that doesn’t deny pain, but refuses to exploit it. One that doesn’t pretend democracy is easy, but proves it’s worth the effort. Because if we keep leaving people alone with their fear, someone — anyone — will always come along with a simple lie to fix it. And that’s a lie too many are still willing to believe. Three Things You Can Do When a Politician Plays the ‘I Alone Can Fix It’ Game:
You play the game you are in, not the one you wish you were in. And today’s game demands we confront the autocratic impulse wherever it emerges — not just in the form of one man, but in the form of a mindset. One that says democracy is too slow, too broken, too hard. It’s not. It’s just honest. And honesty — unlike autocracy — doesn’t need to be perfect. It just needs to be real. Trygve Olson is a strategist, pro-democracy fighter and a founding Lincoln Project advisor. He writes the Searching for Hope Substack. Read the original column here. You’re currently a free subscriber to Lincoln Square Media. For full access to our content, our Lincoln Loyal community, and to help us amplify the facts about the assault on our rights and freedoms, please consider upgrading your subscription today with this limited-time offer: |