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Power and Corruption: Just What Is Their Relationship?

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Andrew Schmookler
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If our hypothetical powerful and uncorrupt person possessed COMPLETE power, this would not be the case. He could simply decide always and only for the good, and so it would be. But in the actual world, no one's power is ever so total as that. And therefore, to to accomplish good, he will need to make common cause with others.

If he were in an ideal world, making common cause with others in order to achieve the good would not require our sterling leader to become complicit in corruption. But the real world in which he must operate is far from ideal. And among the others with whom he must make common cause there will be some who are corrupt.

A prototypical instance of this is the need, in World War II, for the democracies to make alliance with Stalin, a tyrant on whose hands was already the blood of many millions of his own (Soviet) people before the war had even begun. Another instance is how the creators of the New Deal required as allies the segregationist powers of the Jim Crow South.

Such instances could be multiplied almost endlessly.

This is always one of the consequences of choosing to operate in the realm of power-- at least for those who are willing to accept that part of the responsibility that comes with power is the duty to achieve as much good as possible for the world, even though accomplishing that means inevitably that one must get one's "hands dirty."

This, incidentally, presents one of the greatest challenges facing citizens in their search for good leaders: how to differentiate between those who indulge in corruption because that suits their purposes, and those who participate in corruption as the necessary means of accomplishing truly good purposes.

So we have a fourth dimension of the relationship between power and corruption. Lord Acton is probably right that power tends to corrupt, and Brin right that power attracts the corruptible (and the corrupt). And power also affords people the opportunity to show the corrupt tendencies they'd previously kept hidden.

And finally, participation in power also requires even the uncorrupt to participate in the corruption of the world.

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Andy Schmookler, an award-winning author, political commentator, radio talk-show host, and teacher, was the Democratic nominee for Congress from Virginia's 6th District. His new book -- written to have an impact on the central political battle of our time -- is (more...)
 
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