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Espionage During The Cold War

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Espionage is a common theme in both novels, as well as an actual part of everyday life in most, if not all, countries today. It started with the rivalry between nations, and has developed from merely embedding people in other communities as spies to using minute devices to tap houses and businesses. The two novels each upgrade the commonly held impression of espionage by integrating some of the writer’s imagination with currently existent facts. George Orwell witnessed the Cold War, which produced an alarming amount of espionage between the USA and the USSR. Suzanne Collins drew her inspiration for her books from her father, who was an American military veteran, resulting in her qualified knowledge of military spying.
In 2013, Edward Snowden …show more content…

There are up to 4.2 million CCTV (Closed-circuit television) cameras in Britain - approximately one for every fourteen people. Pedestrians are continuously being monitored by the surveillance cameras in the streets. International visitors who are applying for entry have to get their picture taken by a camera that is installed at the upper corner of the application room. This camera placement resembles the position of a surveillance camera. Even though some people have become used to the abundance of cameras in the streets, most are certain that they will not be watched in the privacy of their homes, since cameras cannot be installed in their property without their consent. Therefore, we are not being watched all the time; there are no telescreens to follow our every move or breach the sacredness of our homes. In the interest of security, property owners can install cameras in and around the property’s perimeter. Security cameras have a deterrent effect on crime. In the event of a crime, footage from security cameras can be used to find the criminal and submit him to justice. Therefore, the primary purpose of the CCTV is different from that of surveillance cameras. It is used to maintain …show more content…

Charrington, the man who rented Winston a safe room. The party had created a community of proles, where it seems that life is not as restricted as in the city in which Winston lives and that people are not monitored by the party. Within the community are spies who are used to seize fugitives or offenders committing crimes. This situation exists today in North Korea: the current political system restricts the citizens; they are constantly being observed, even symbolically. Banners of Kim the first and the second are on display in order to emphasize that the citizens are always "under the watchful eyes" of their leaders. The Pyongyang University of Foreign Languages is a spy school. The spies are recruited to spy on the citizens on North Korea and other countries. “Its most famous alumnus is, according to US Congressional testimony, Kim Hyun Hee. She was one of the most dangerous spies that North Korea had placed to spy on both North and South Koreans. On 29th of November 1987, Kim killed 115 innocent people, mostly South Koreans, on Flight 585. Spies are a country's first and most used weapons. However, the reality surpassed the imagination of George Orwell; spies no longer just watch their targets, but they also take actions against them even if it means jeopardising many people’s

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