Dalai Lama (14th) — "Lack of transparency, lack of accountability, that is the main source of corrupt…"
Lack of transparency, lack of accountability, that is the main source of corruption.
Lack of transparency, lack of accountability, that is the main source of corruption.
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"If you want others to be happy, practice compassion. If you want to be happy, practice compassion."
"I like to play golf, but I am not very good at it. I usually lose my balls in the bushes."
"The purpose of our lives is to be happy."
"Dialogue is the only way to resolve differences."
"I am a simple person. I don't have many possessions. I just have my robes and my beads."
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Corruption doesn't begin with greed alone — it thrives when systems allow bad behavior to go unseen and unpunished. When leaders and institutions aren't required to explain their decisions or face consequences for wrongdoing, self-interest fills the vacuum. Openness forces honesty; accountability enforces it. Without both operating together, power naturally drifts toward abuse, and corruption becomes the default condition of any government, organization, or institution.
Tenzin Gyatso witnessed this directly: China's opaque annexation of Tibet and the 1959 crackdown that forced his exile operated without any accountability to Tibetans. His government-in-exile in Dharamsala was deliberately built on democratic, transparent structures as a counter-model. He has spent decades writing on secular ethics and arguing that accountable governance — not merely spiritual virtue — is the foundation of just societies, making this observation deeply personal and politically grounded.
This saying resonates against a backdrop of rising global authoritarianism, major corporate scandals like Enron in 2001, and the founding of Transparency International in 1993 to systematically measure and combat corruption worldwide. WikiLeaks and whistleblower movements from the mid-2000s onward forced transparency debates into mainstream politics. Meanwhile, China's closed one-party system — the most direct force in the Dalai Lama's own life — became the era's defining example of how unaccountable power breeds endemic corruption.
AI-generated insights based on extensive research and information for context. Factual errors? Email [email protected].
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