1984 By George Orwell Essay

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Yet the government controls what we place in our body, what we watch on TV, what we hear on the radio, and how much we get paid. But while our government can violate our rights, it also functions as the protest of our rights and freedoms as well. In 1984 the Party destroys all sense of independence and identity. Everyone puts on the same clothes, eats the same food, and lives in the same grungy apartments. Life is uniform and neat. No one can stand out, and no one can be unparalleled. Precisely like in the book there are times when the government enables us to effectively protect our rights and freedoms. We blindly follow the government and what it instructs us to serve. The entire government exists solely for the purpose of protecting the …show more content…

The Ministry of Truth lies about their history; the Ministry of Love tortures people who are in love; and the Ministry of Peace goes out and wages war. The party keeps control the people by using of doublethink: which is the ability to think two completely opposing ideas at the same time, considering both to be honest. In 1984 by George Orwell is embodied in the party's slogan: War is Peace; Freedom is Slavery; Ignorance is Strength. The party slogan holds many different meanings, depending on who's reading it, for the inner party it means as long as Oceania is at war, the people are able to aim their wrath at the war and the enemy; the inner party enjoys its freedom assuming they have one as much as enslave people, be it outer party members, workers, or workers in the war zone; as long as the people remain ignorant of the truth and don’t say anything, the party remains strong. The party highly believes peace can only be gain by eliminating the world and concurring the enemies of the party and of Oceania. They think that to act freely they have to keep up with everything they do so their possible doom don’t accrue to them. They think that any variation from the party weakens the nation, that to say the party prefer to stay

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