Recognition that remaining quiet about injustice and corruption makes one complicit in its perpetuation, a psychological and moral trap that corruption exploits.
Sor Juana faced immense pressure to silence herself—to abandon her intellectual pursuits, to accept her prescribed role, to remain inconspicuous within systems that constrained her. Yet she understood that silence, even when it feels safe, becomes a form of participation. Corruption spreads through networks of silent complicity: people who witness wrongdoing but say nothing, who rationalize inaction, who tell themselves the cost of speaking is too high. This psychological pattern—the normalization of silence—is corruption's most insidious weapon. It transforms potential resisters into passive enablers. The concept of complicit silence challenges the comfortable myth of neutrality; it names the hidden cost of inaction. When corruption is known but unspoken, it gains legitimacy and momentum. Sor Juana's insistence on articulating truth, despite social exile and institutional pressure, demonstrates that breaking silence—even imperfectly, even at personal cost—is essential to disrupting corruption's reach and restoring spaces where justice can emerge.
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