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The Failure Of Power In Animal Farm, By George Orwell

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Imagine a world where the people holding power always did what was good for everyone. As history has taught us, this doesn’t always happen. Animal Farm, by George Orwell, is a complex story about the dangers of too much government power, and the ones in power are definitely not doing things for the good of others. When the pigs take control of the farm, they become greedy, dishonest, and deceitful. Orwell lived in Europe during the time of the Russian Revolution, when there were countless dictatorships around the world. He wrote this story to symbolize (and mock) the Russian Revolution; which includes Karl Marx, Leon Trotsky, Joseph Stalin, and Vyacheslav Molotov. Orwell uses this story, where the oppressed become the oppressors, to warn the world about the power of the government. He also warns the reader not to let the corrupt control and not stand by and let it happen. He shows that the abuse of absolute power can lead to corruption, violence, and finally, chaos.
The first warning Orwell introduces to the reader is that standing by passively while a would-be tyrant rises to power will end up in a birth of a dictatorship and a loss of personal freedom. At the beginning, the animals attempt to establish a democracy where everyone can vote and have a say, but when the animals vote for Snowball as their leader, Napoleon becomes jealous and runs Snowball off the farm with his vicious dogs, which symbolizes the military that a dictator uses. All of this represents how

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