About the Ones Who Walk Away

569 Words2 Pages

I do admire the people who walk away from Omelas because they are noble and brave. They refuse to accept the terms and conditions of happiness in Omelas. The happiness-of-the-many for the misery-of-one paradox is so unbalanced and immoral that they just could not accept it. Le Guin says that the Omalasian, “know that they, like the child, are not free.” They are brave because they run away from their prison of Omelas into the unknown. They are searching for a place the author admits may not exist. There may not be a society or a place where a scapegoat underclass does not exist, but that does not stop the ones who walk away from Omelas from searching for it. I believe Le Guin is vague in her description of Omelas because details like its laws and its technology are not important to the overall messages of the story. In fact, any more details about Omalas could have hindered the story's message and may have been a distraction. If she described Omelas' laws, we could perhaps point to inequality in other parts of their culture and say that the misery of the child was only a fault of t...

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