The 25th of November, 2011, has been permanently tattooed in Moroccan memories and hearts as it was a significant day in Morocco’s history. PJD, the Party of Justice and Development, came out winner of the harsh competition that was to oppose the Moroccan parties because it seemed to have made quite tempting promises to the Moroccan populace. Its message was straightforward and obviously promising to the millions of citizens who have been hoping for change for numerous years and who couldn't wait anymore for a better tomorrow. Their situation wasn’t obviously as poignant as the Negro’s situation, described in Martin Luther King’s Letter from Birmingham Jail, was. Nonetheless, it’s undeniable that these Moroccan citizens suffered for many years from the penury of numerous basic rights. Hence, they read in the lines the PJD members wrote and heard in the speeches these same members made one only word: hope; hope for change and progress. Inauspiciously, this hope has been smashed many times before when the winners of the previous elections didn’t keep their promises. Today, I, as well as all the citizens of my country, call for an immediate change within our Moroccan society. Our beloved country suffers from a shortage in many important areas. Unluckily, poor people are mostly the ones paying the price for these deficiencies. Thus, it is only reasonable if not mandatory for us to ask for a change that will, not only take our country into a high place of progress and development, but also be the reason behind improving people’s life as it will eradicate corruption and focus on other social issues. Today, it became palpable for everyone that corruption has a negative impact on the various wheels of our country, which affects badly its progress. It is then compulsory to grasp the problem of corruption and estimate the difficulties of laying the bases of a policy against this scourge. For this purpose, one should not only focus on what kind of outcome may have resulted from this plague, but also inspect the causes which are the seeds behind the growth of this phenomenon. Here is a saying from Letter from Birmingham Jail that clearly agrees with this idea: “I am sure that none of you would want to rest content with the superficial kind of social analysis that deals merely with effects and does not grapple with underlying causes” (Martin Luther King, 289/290). Numerous questions with regard to corruption may be asked: How people’s integrity, if they actually own one, allows them to corrupt and then let people suffer from their outrageous conduct? Is it the hunger of luxury, the love of the easy and hasty profits or is it actually the immense pleasure which results from crushing one’s competitors? In either case, one should wonder if these people are the only responsible for such acts or if our somehow nonchalant system is also to blame; the laxity of our legal system and the nature of our laws are definitely to be classified among the factors that favor the spread of this evil and discredit any attempt to eradicate it. Thus, in a context where impunity stands almost as a rule of our society, it becomes imperative to seek for remedies of global order to this illness. Since the PJD coalescent with the IP, Is