Harrison Bergeron Essay

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Many will fight for equality if it means no one will be better than another. Society was never built on equality, someone always had a higher power. The story “Harrison Bergeron” by Kurt Vonnegut shows a society where everyone is equal. No one is more intelligent, attractive, strong, and has many more aspects that can make a person better than everyone else. If a person is above average, the government places onto them something that affects them mentally and physically to make them average. Ultimately, the story shows differences from others are the reason society keeps growing, if everyone is limited no progress is being made. At the beginning of the story, it was 2018 and everyone was equal. If someone was the slightest bit advanced, there were consequences put on them to …show more content…

Prioritizing equality is difficult because there is always going to be someone more advanced than many. This character helps to show that equality is impossible to achieve. Even with the most advanced technology, there is always a person who beats the odds. That should not be taken away, it should rather be celebrated. In the story, everyone who has advanced thinking has a handicap placed on them. This prevents those advanced thoughts of the above average from dumbing down their thinking. The father of Harrison, George, had handicaps placed on him. “Hazel saw him wince. Having no mental handicap herself, she had to ask George what the latest sound had been” (Vonnegut 1). Whenever George has thoughts that are considered above-average intelligence, a sharp noise from his handicap goes through his head and the thought goes away. George has constant thoughts of his child being taken away by the government, but he cannot experience the grief and sorrows from it because his thoughts are constantly being taken away. A lot of people's definition of equality is to bring everyone higher up, but in this story, it is bringing everyone

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