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The Power Of Power In George Orwell's Animal Farm

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Power is gained by using force and maintained through instilling fear and telling lies when people under that leadership are too scared to speak out and they accept the way society and life is because they don’t know any other way of life. First and foremost, power is first acquired through establishing dominance within the domain where people are under this power. For example, after Snowball was chased off, Napoleon forced every animal to work on the windmill, doing rigorous work. It was very uncommon that Napoleon was actually doing any work or helping the animals. The text states “All that year the animals worked like slaves… it was a slow, laborious process. Frequently it took a whole day of exhausting effort to drag a single boulder…” (Orwell 73, 74). As can be seen, the animals are being overworked. The only reason the animals continued working was because they thought it would benefit them in the future. Even if they didn’t realize it, Napoleon was forcing them to do the hard labour of the Windmill for his benefit only, and didn’t care about the wellbeing of the animals. Additionally, shortly after the windmill had been destroyed, Squealer told the hens they needed to be laying more eggs and giving them up so Napoleon could trade with neighboring farm. The hens were not satisfied with this decision and rebelled by dropping their eggs on the barn because if they can’t have their own eggs, no one can. Orwell wrote, “...Squealer announced that the hens...must surrender

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