The Ones Who Walk Away From Omelas Essay

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It was lunchtime at Hastings High School, and an intriguing question was burning a hole in the minds of sophomores throughout the halls, taking a place right next to all the lyrics off Coloring Book. This question spawned philosophical debates more impassioned than those at Madame Geoffrin's Salons. One question was all it took to rattle me to my core and force a reevaluation of all my morals and beliefs. What had once been right was now wrong, and it was all because when asked, “Would you walk away?” I answered, “Yes.”
What prompted all this was a short story by Ursula Le Guin titled “The Ones Who Walk Away From Omelas.” Mr. Abrams, the sapient philosophe of Hastings High School, had our English class read it the period before lunch. The fictional story described a city, Omelas, where nearly everybody’s life was as perfect as possible, except one. That one wretched life, led by a boy absorbing all the misery in the city, was the basis for all the perfection. Omelas was a Utopia built on the agony of one, a utilitarian paradise. To many of its citizens, Omelas’ near perfection outweighed the one blemish, and most had no qualms with staying. Most, that is, except the ones that could no longer …show more content…

I’ll admit it- I’m a white, upper middle class northern liberal, so the very existence of my way of life is a result of the suffering of others. My ancestors amassed their power by subjugating whoever was on the land they coveted, and my own being consumed much but contributed little. With this plight and a desire for a clear ethical code in mind, I turned to Mr. Abrams’ infinite wisdom for help with my manifesto. The omniscient mentor gave me two pieces of advice. First, I needed to know what I was talking about. I needed to exactly identify what I saw as the right thing to do in the world. Second, I needed to pursue that thing to the ends of the earth. So I started

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