Orwell's Warnings

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In the book 1984, Orwell gives the reader warnings, these warnings can be taken into account or ignored. One of the warnings from the book was to beware the amount of power a person has. If one person or a group of people have too much power, things will be unbalanced and can go wrong. In this book a group of individuals called the 'Party' has a lot of power and gains it by lying and controlling people. They take away people's natural rights, by prohibiting rebellious thoughts and language. The expression of individuality is illegal, so everyone is the same, as far as looks, thoughts, and speech. Orwell warns the reader about this topic because if this goes overlooked the world can become just like Oceania .
During the novel, Orwell shows how …show more content…

Everyone is the same, they think the same, speak the same, and act the same. For example in chapter seven it says "a nation of warriors and fanatics, marching forward in perfect unity, all thinking the same thoughts and shouting the same slogans… three hundred million people all with the same face" (Orwell 77). This quote explains that everyone is in complete unison, and the Party is to blame. The amount of power that the Party has allows them to do the following, and control people's thoughts. This is another example as to why too much power in the hands of the wrong person, doesn't end well. There is no freedom in this world, the only freedom you have is to state facts that are accepted by the Party. In novel it says "Freedom is the freedom to say that two plus two make four. If that is granted, all else follows" (Orwell 84). This quote explains that their is no freedom, and Party wants to make that …show more content…

But one of the worst things that the Party does to the people of Oceania is control their thoughts and language. Prohibiting the expression of individuality is one thing, but controlling the minds of innocent people and feeding them lies is wrong. "Who controls the past controls the future; who controls the present controls the past" (Orwell 37). In this quote, Orwell is trying to explain that the past has an impact on the future. But the Party, (which is the present) controls the past. They are able to do this by changing history books to their standards, and making false claims. They stated that the past was so bad that it needed to be changed, and that's their reasoning for why the world is the way it is. They would trick your mind into believing these lies so that you believed it.
Overall, the story throws out many warnings that requires a lot of thinking in order to understand. Most of the statements made in 1984, has different meanings and explanations because the content is so complex. The main warning that the reader receives from the book is "excessive power". The Party has excessive power and is controlling people with this power, by monitoring their thoughts and feelings. They change everything about a person that makes them unique by making them the same as their neighbor or best

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