Loss Of Freedom In Animal Farm By George Orwell

568 Words2 Pages

In the novel animal farm Orwell shows how both the leaders and followers in a society can act in ways that destroy freedom and equality. Animal farm is story about how a group of farm animals revolted against man. There will always be a leader and a follower even if the promise made by the leader will never exist but there always be naive. The leader Napoleon and his fellow follower Boxer cause the loss of freedom and equality in the farm. The pigs exploit the other animals shamelessly, breaking all the rules that they had established after the Rebellion. Things fall apart: life on the farm gets worse and worse, the animals forget old Major’s original dream, and the pigs make some poor management decisions when dealing with the neighboring farms. …show more content…

He came to power because he was a pig and pigs were considered the smartest in the farm according to the book. He had to get rid of snowball another pig because he saw him as a competition. The actions that Napoleon took to the destroy freedom and equality was because he gave more rights and freedom to the pigs than any other animal in the farm. Napoleon canceled all Sunday meetings and made all decisions on his own. He also weakened the equality by acting like a human day by day him and his pigs will sleep in beds and would drink. He destroyed The freedom from all the animals by making them all work hard on the windmill they made. The window clean kept his power he was by making sure no one would ever rebel against him. The way he did this was by impacting fear and every animal, he kept his power mostly through propaganda. He also raised the dogs to intimidate and eventually kill the animals who opposed or thought about opposing Napoleon. Napoleon's true goal was to have absolute power in the animal farm, Napoleon is nothing more than just an evil side of Old Major

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