Turkish analysis warns 'political scabies' could erode public moral immunity
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A Turkish political analysis piece uses the metaphor of "political scabies" to describe what it calls a weakening of moral immunity in political life, arguing that success is losing its value while envy and gossip outpace competition. The commentary says political language has shifted toward a model in which insults spread faster than information, provocation outruns persuasion, and difference is treated more quickly as accusation.
According to the analysis, the phenomenon is not confined to politicians. It argues the condition has spread to the media, social media platforms and the wider public, contributing to a broader erosion of societal immunity.
The author also points to a double standard in which figures join governing circles but avoid responsibility, describing that pattern as a separate subject of study. The piece defines the difference between healthy and diseased politics as the capacity to correct mistakes.
It closes with a warning that if society tolerates political scabies for long, what begins as a localized skin condition can turn into an epidemic that corrodes the state from within.
