Role Of Equality In Harrison Bergeron

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Land of the equal and home of the stupid

Can an equal society truly exist? In “Harrison Bergeron,” Vonnegut suggests that total equality is not an ideal worth striving for, as many people believe, but a mistaken goal. To achieve physical and mental equality among all Americans, the government in the story tortures its citizens. The beautiful are forced to look ugly, the physically skilled are required to wear weights. With these handicaps making everyone so equal, the world became very different, odd, and average. America becomes a land of cowed, stupid, slow people. Government officials murder the extremely gifted with no fear of reprisal. Equality is more or less achieved, but at the cost of freedom and individual achievement. Which shows that happiness and forced equality cannot coexist.

Happiness and forced equality cannot coexist because there is no freedom. In the Harrison Bergeron society inhabitants have to wear varying types of handicaps so that equality is maintained, but in doing so, they lose their freedom. The “H-G men took George and Hazel Bergeron's fourteen-year-old son, …show more content…

In this society, gifted citizens have to wear a handicap. Harrison had “a little ear radio for a mental handicap, he wore a tremendous pair of earphones” (Vonnegut). The mental handicap earphones make a loud noise in his head when he starts to think vigorously, so the he forgets what he was thinking about. If a person cannot think they cannot achieve their goals. Due to the handicaps a person in the society cannot discover the limits of his mental ability because their is disrupted because of the government mandated handicaps. People in this society were limited to utilize the full limit of their mental capacity because the government wanted to control the people, so equality is maintained. People are held back because they cannot think freely, which leads to them not being

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