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Animal Farm Some Animals Are More Equal Than Others

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In rebellion no one should go unwatched. No action should be unseen and no one should be left unmonitored. At the end of Animal Farm, the pigs have started walking on two legs, they have invited the humans from neighboring farms over, and they have been wearing clothes, drinking alcohol and other human activities. With that quote, “Animals are more equal but some animals are more equal than others,” the reader of the story must wonder if the pigs planned to take over from the start. Snowball was one, if not the only pig, that wanted a better life for all of the animals and not just for the pigs. Old Major was already dead by this point and Snowball carried the torch of Old Major’s dream as he sought to build the windmill for everyone’s benefit. It was not until his excursion by Napoleon that the Animal Farm started to take on a more tyrannical appearance in government. As the head pig, Napoleon started manipulating the other animals to his will. He abused Snowball’s name, he banned “the Beasts of England” from being sung, he sold the animal’s products, and he publically executed animals after forcing them to confess their “crimes”.
He lied to his fellow animals until he and the other pigs became so distinguished from them that the pigs started to look …show more content…

It is clear, to the reader and to the animals in the story, that the pigs embraced the full role of man on Animal Farm in stride. They treated their fellow animals as Mr. Jones had in the past, in cruel and harsh ways. They do so to gain money and leisure from their fellow animals’ product. Eggs, foal, or even dung. If it could be sold then the pigs would whisk it away from the animals and sell it for every cent that they could. They forced the chickens to starve when the poultry rebelled against their overlords’ wishes. The pigs sold a dying Boxer off for money and took all the cows’ milk for

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