The principle that public expression and defense of one's position are essential mechanisms for exposing and preventing institutional corruption.
Sor Juana's famous letter defending her intellectual work against ecclesiastical criticism illustrates how voice prevents corruption. When individuals and whistleblowers can speak, write, and defend their positions without fear, corrupt actors lose their power to operate in darkness. Silence protects corruption; transparency exposes it. Sor Juana risked her reputation to articulate her rights and challenge unjust restrictions. Societies that suppress voice—that punish questioning, discourage public discourse, and silence dissent—create ideal conditions for corruption to flourish unchecked. By establishing legal protections, cultural norms, and institutional pathways for public accountability, communities honor this principle. The right to voice transforms isolated knowledge into collective scrutiny that catches what individuals might miss.
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