Depends on what you mean by having power, I suppose. I want control over my own life and no one else's. I actually hate being in positions of leadership. Giving orders makes me feel like a jerk.
I see where you're coming from and respect it, but really when you get enough people around, it becomes inevitable. People simply can't know everything. If I really had to, I could change my oil and some other minor things, but otherwise I am completely helpless about cars. I'm also not good with medicine, engineering (though I learned a lot from a great boyfriend once), advanced computer science (I'm a competent user who codes a little tiny bit). What I know is law and accounting.... I have to rely on other people in society. Even though I could probably get along on a desert island, I really, really, really would not want to <-- understatement.
I dunno. About the only thing I see as viable is to employ countermeasures to corruption. My mechanic could kill me easily by doing a bad job and so could my doctor.... I like to think there are checks in place to prevent that. Politics is also a career worth specializing in... look what happens when it goes badly....
I dunno. I really hope I'm not alone in giving a shit about my cases and reading legal encyclopedias at home to get better at my job to provide better service....
There are of course a whole load of other forms of corruption, a friend once told me he wasn't an organ donor because in Russia paramedics would let you die so they could sell your organs. Which goes to show that pretty much any aspect of public services can become corrupt.
Not to say this isn't true, but believing something like that because "my friend heard this from people" isn't very reliable, especially with something that's already basically an urban legend.
In Soviet Russia, organs donate you... (I apologize but just wow that's sad). Actually it appears to be in Brazil:
http://www.macon.com/2011/10/21/1754124/brazil-doctors-found-guilty-of.html recently at least.
I understand bribery is also a big cultural thing in China (my ethics courses covered this),
http://www.businessweek.com/magazine/content/10_29/b4187011931530.htm.
I don't know. All I know is people lie in my line of work all the time when they expressly say they won't under oath. The only thing I've found that stops them is cross examination/confronting them with the truth directly.
[Edit: holy crap, how many replies while I was typing]