
Corruption in the states
- John Washington

- 5 days ago
- 1 min read

I think it’s beyond crazy that we have members of Congress—congressmen, congresswomen, and senators—who will hunt for small, convenient issues and try to inflate them into national crises, while completely ignoring the real fights. Meanwhile, people’s rights are being violated every day—behind ICE operations, through corrupt state systems, and through policies that quietly strip citizens of due process and basic freedoms.
I’ve noticed a pattern: too many politicians avoid the hard battles. They don’t confront systemic abuse. They don’t challenge unconstitutional practices. Instead, they pick up crumbs, run with distractions, and call it leadership. And the question has to be asked—are they doing this because they benefit from the corruption the state profits from?
When politicians refuse to confront real injustice, they are not neutral. They are complicit.
These failures are not accidental. The American people have been failed by elected officials who protect systems instead of citizens. And let’s be very clear about this: any lawmaker who actively searches for loopholes in the Constitution to justify overreach, control, or exploitation does not have the people’s best interests at heart. Their loyalty is to power, not to the public.
If you put state interests above the rights of the people, you are unfit to hold public office. Period. Public office exists to serve the people—not to outsmart the Constitution, not to shield corruption, and not to preserve systems that harm the very citizens they were sworn to protect.
This country does not need more political games. It needs courage. It needs accountability. And it needs leaders who are willing to fight the real fights—no matter who benefits from the truth coming out.



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