Corruption in South Africa did not emerge overnight. It developed over time, evolving from small everyday exchanges into deeply embedded systems that influence how power and resources are distributed. In this episode, corruption is broken down in simple terms, showing how minor acts such as “favours” or small bribes can scale into widespread practices that affect entire institutions. What begins at a local level can, over time, expand into complex networks that shape procurement, governance, and decision making across the country. The conversation examines major moments that exposed these systemic issues, including findings from the Zondo Commission and controversies surrounding Covid 19 procurement. While these investigations revealed significant wrongdoing, many South Africans feel that the outcomes did not lead to the level of accountability they expected. The role of bodies like the Special Investigating Unit is also explored, highlighting both their findings and the limitations they face in ensuring consequences are enforced. At its core, the discussion explains why corruption can feel endless. When systems contain loopholes, weak enforcement, and limited consequences, the incentives to engage in corrupt behavior remain in place. This creates a cycle where public trust erodes, and the perception grows that accountability is inconsistent or absent. Understanding corruption as a system rather than isolated incidents provides a clearer picture of why it persists, and why meaningful reform requires more than exposing wrongdoing.