Fahrenheit 451 Pedestrian

1872 Words4 Pages

Pedestrians are not only those who walk around town and interact with others; they are also considered different. Pedestrians should feel comfortable and safe when walking around town, but society and law enforcement are against us, we don’t feel that way. engage in verbal or physical aggression, discriminating against and punishing us simply for our differences. They treat us as if we were criminals, even though we haven’t done anything. Being a pedestrian should not be considered a crime, and being a criminal should not be a crime. If we were all the same, there would be no difference between criminals and pedestrians. There would be no variety of things because everyone would have had the same idea. No more evolutions in material or immaterial …show more content…

We usually criticize people for their looks without really knowing how they are, because we are so used to the fact that people should be a certain way. And when they aren’t discriminating, this would be what they call “pedestrians” in Fahrenheit 451. Their society also defines people who are different, as “pedestrians”. But they define them due to their knowledge that the society of Fahrenheit 451 ranks you as one of the “pedestrians” or the crazy kind. In the book Fahrenheit 451, Clarisse tells Montag and us how his uncle was arrested and jailed for two days for driving slowly on a highway. This is considered a crime in their society because no one drives slowly nowadays. No person takes the time to drive slowly and appreciate the view or life. Society is so consumed with paying attention to technology that they don’t pay attention to the actual world. That is why they find Clarisse’s uncle so abnormal that he gets arrested. Just like us, we get outcasted for being different. Not following the norm makes you unwanted in both societies, because they feel threatened by it. But being ourselves shouldn’t be a crime, it shouldn’t even be considered a

More about Fahrenheit 451 Pedestrian

Open Document