When institutions claim values they systematically violate, that gap itself indicates deeper systemic corruption.
The Catholic Church of Sor Juana's era claimed to value truth, learning, and spiritual development while systematically suppressing women's intellectual participation and enforcing doctrinal conformity. Sor Juana recognized that this gap between stated values and actual practices was not incidental but revelatory—it exposed corruption at the institutional core. Organizations that preach integrity while protecting wrongdoers, claim meritocracy while promoting insiders, or espouse transparency while hiding records all display this corruption signal. Anti-corruption frameworks should treat institutional hypocrisy seriously: when the gap between public claims and private practices widens, it indicates that the institution has normalized deception at leadership levels. Combating corruption requires making these gaps visible and undeniable, forcing institutions either to abandon pretense or align behavior with stated values. Sor Juana's method was to document the contradiction meticulously and present it to those capable of witnessing it.
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