How Did Napoleon Treat The Animals On Animal Farm

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The animals on animal farm were fed up with the way they were constantly being treated. They were underfed and overworked, so with the guidance of old major they rebelled against their tyrannical master. Questions arose, however, after they drove their master off the farm, such as who would be their new leader. Napoleon took advantage of the animals vulnerability and consolidated his role as leader.
Napoleon was no better than the farmer when it came to treating the animals. He had them working on the windmill for long, unreasonable hours. Napoleon instated a “strictly voluntary” labor on Sundays; the animals may decide whether they want to work but if they did not work their food rations were cut in half. The animals were all weak and hungry so they continued to work on Sundays for the measly rations they were given. While the other animals slaved away on the windmill, the pigs stayed in the farmhouse drinking wine and playing poker disregarding the hardworking animals. …show more content…

Napoleon was not the brightest pig and was not very good at striking deals. After he had successfully run Snowball off the farm and had begun the production of the windmill, the animals were in dire need of food. However the farms economy was going downhill, so Napoleon deceived the animals by filling the haystacks with sand to make the food supply seem larger. The animals also needed more supplies to build the windmill and to solve that problem Napoleon began trading with neighboring farms. However in the Seven Commandments it says that no animal shall trade with humans, or use money. Napoleon quickly convinced the animals that they were not directly in contact with the humans, so they were doing nothing

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