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The Effects On Society Through Human Restrictions Essay

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Jasmine Vu Mrs. McGlaughlin English Honors II 6 September 2016 The Effects on Society Through Human Restrictions in George Orwell’s 1984 George Orwell’s 1984 depicts the horrific realities of a totalitarian-controlled society in which privacy is never-ceasingly intruded on, in order to ensure the public remains compliant to the order of the Party, a group of government members operating under the head chief, Big Brother. Winston, an average Joe, works at the Ministry of Truth, a branch of Big Brother’s operation that deals with controlling and altering the news and, history itself, for the sole purpose of playing tricks on people’s perceptions of reality to maintain that compliancy. Not only does the government change the course of history, they also embed their ideologies into the youth, meaning, from the start, children are encouraged to turn their own parents into the police at the slightest tremble of rebellion. This invasive privacy extends to the government watching over the citizens and glimpsing into their thoughts, in order to weed out the rebellious thinkers before they can question their authority. By partaking in this obstruction of human rights, the Party keeps the citizens readily molded to believe any heresies to come from Big Brother, or, at least the mouth of the government under his image, in which case forms an obedient and docile group of followers. To control a society of such a large scale takes incredible strength and willpower, however,

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