Corruption In George Orwell's Animal Farm

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"Power tends to corrupt, and absolute power corrupts absolutely. Great men are almost always bad men." - Sir Ferdinand Dalberg-Acton. Power is the source of almost all evil. It can lead away good men from doing their good deeds. Many good men have come to power with only good intentions, they plan to change the world for the better. These men often succumb to the greed that power brings to them. Even with good intentions, no one is perfect and something is bound to go wrong. When there is no one in power and everyone is “equal” there will surely be someone to take advantage of that. This is what happens with communism, one man comes in and “makes everyone equal” by giving himself more power for “everyone’s benefit”. This is what happened to …show more content…

As it rolls down that hill, it picks up more snow and slowly gets bigger and bigger, to the point of where no one else can stop it from rolling down. This is what Napoleon started. To begin with, Napoleon created the snowball (i.e. corruption) on Animal Farm by taking the puppies, ”As soon as they were weaned, Napoleon took them away from their mothers, saying that he would make himself responsible for their education”(pg 35). This started the corruption because he lied about his purposes for the puppies. He said he would educate them in the ways of Animalism from birth. What he ended up doing is training them to be his personal bodyguards. In chapter 5, Napoleon pushes that snowball down the hill by kicking Snowball out of the farm. This corrupted the farm even further because now he had power. That was against Animalism, but he made it seem like it was all ok. After kicking out Snowball, he sped up the corruption of the farm by then manipulating the minds of the animals against Snowball. This is one of the most corruptive things one can do to the people under their control. Napoleon is to blame for the corruption because he pushed the snowball down the hill and started the

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