Wednesday, October 2, 2019
Farenheit 451 as a Warning :: Farenheit 451 Essays
      Farenheit 451 as a Warning                 What are the rights of a government? Does the  government have the right to control what we think and where we get our  intellectual stimulation? After the Constitution of the United States was  drafted, a Bill of Rights containing ten articles was adopted and ratified by  the thirteen states. In the first article, it guaranteed the people the freedom  of religion, speech, the press, and public assembly. People were given the right  to enrich themselves with knowledge accumulated through their readings from  whatever source they chose and to make criticism towards the government as they  saw fit. Because of the liberty given to its people, it is no wonder that the  United States government is considered a model government in the world today.  Any sound government would allow its people to make their own free judgement  according to their knowledge from any sources they may gather.                       Ray Bradbury's vision of a disordered world  was expressed in his book Fahrenheit 451. Set in the future, it deals with a  man's struggle between his destructive government position and his inner  self-conscience. Guy Montag was a fireman but he did not put out fires. Instead,  he created them through the burning of books. This was what Bradbury was trying  to imply through the title of his book, Fahrenheit 451, the temperature at which  books burn. Montag was leading a fairly happy life until he met a girl,  Clarisse, who aroused his deepest feelings and fears. He became curious about  the contents of books and wondered why they were so feared. This led him through  a series of events which changed his life forever. When Montag asked Beatty  about the burning of books he was told, "If you don't want a man to be unhappy  politically, don't give him two sides to a question to worry him; give him one.  Better yet, give him none." The futurist government displayed in Fahrenheit 45   1  tried to prevent any feelings or opinions contrary to their own because they did  not want to be challenged. Instead, they fed unwanted junk into the minds of  their people through the parlor, a wall to wall television. This machine, that  does not inspire the thinking process, lead them to make the conclusion that  their world revolves around it and nothing else.  					    
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