This is a very interesting question. How far should we go? As far as the Philippines on drugs? Encourage citizens to shoot dealers? That's a bit far for me! Encourage citizens to inform on each other? Isn't that what they did in Nazi Germany? Set up anonymous contact points for reporting possible wrongdoings? Perhaps.
The key problem is that the accuser maybe lying or be simply wrong. It's a potential recipe for civil war.
To be honest Ajab, what you say makes sense, but it's difficult to make real. Looking a several cases here in the UK, rules and attempts at enforcement haven't got us very far at all! Currently, it's the case of Carillion--a private supplier of public goods. Apparently, corrupt. Three main directors seem to have lied bare faced. What real chance do we have?
Enforcing and strict implementation of accepted social and behavioural laws such as heavy physical and legislative punishment, heavy fines and social isolation such as impressment in Gail.
Reduce the power of the managerial elites in the West (North America, Europe, Israel, Australia and New Zealand). In the Slavic civilization in the east corruption is a great problem due to communist rule from the 1920s to 1989. In Latin America Chile could be a model for lesser corruption.
Mr. Bertil Haggman, LLM
Author,
Director, Center for Research on Geopolitics (CRG), Sweden