Similarities Between Wall-E And Fahrenheit 451

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How Technology Can Ruin A Society
In the film Wall-E, produced by Disney and the novel Fahrenheit 451, written by Ray Bradbury illustrate similar themes of how technology can destroy a society. Through technology, humans do not directly communicate with one another, they only interact through screens. Through technology, humans are letting robots and other technology do everything for them, making humans seem inferior to the machines. These futuristic technology based societies are a warning to the modern society to control the human use and production of technology.
Wall-E and Fahrenheit 451 display a lack of relationships and human communication. The people on the spaceship do not physically interact with one another, they only communicate …show more content…

The Hound is used as a dog to hunt down and kill fugitives who are breaking the law. Mildred takes too many of her sleeping pills which can kill her, so Montag calls 9-1-1. Two people who look like mechanics show up. “They had two machines really. One of them slid down into your stomach like a black cobra down an echoing well . . . The other machine pumped all of the blood from the body and it replaced it with fresh blood” (Bradbury 12). These machines are taking away the jobs from lots of doctors. The Hound is also doing a job that humans can do. Eventually, machines will be able to perform all basic functions that humans can. Then, the machines will take over and over populate all of the needs for humans. In Wall-E, robots do everything for the humans. Robots are created to go onto Earth and look for life to see if Earth is can sustain life again. A robot is made to fly the spaceship, instead of the captain flying the spaceship. Robots are made to the security guards of the spaceship. A robot is made to clean up the Earth while all of the humans are flying in space. “Segways for those unwilling to do something as basic as walk and skyrocketing obesity rates (Chamberlin). The humans were sitting on electrical chairs that they could move so that they did not have to walk, and they became obese. Also these robots are putting the humans out of jobs. The humans could have piloted the ship or hunted down criminals. “47 percent of American jobs could be at risk due to ‘computerization’ over roughly the next two decades” (Soergel). Considering that both of these sources are set in the future, imagine how many more jobs will be lost due to new technology. Mildred and her friends do not even work. These displays are a warning to modern society to not get too caught up in the perks of technology. Do not let these new contraptions come in and make the people less human and take over all of the

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