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Harrison Bergeron

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Harrison Bergeron
In the short story “Harrison Bergeron” by Kurt Vonnegut Jr. theme played an unusually role in the stories. The theme was mostly on a general that had a law of equality, Vonnegut captured this by making everyone have the same intelligence, strengths and weaknesses, and he made everyone look alike.
Imagine a world where an oppressive government captures what many call diversity. Where ugly is known as beauty and intelligence is insignificant. “They weren't only equal before God and the law. They were equal every which way. Nobody was smarter than anybody else. Nobody was better looking than anybody else. Nobody was stronger or quicker than anybody else.” (Vonnegut) This is the future that Harrison experiences, in the short story “Harrison Bergeron,” by Kurt Vonnegut. It is the year 2081 and the government handicaps every citizen with make up or weights to create equality. Where there are over than 200 amendments and the government has full control of all citizens, this is indeed against what America had been built on. Harrison Bergeron touches on the civil rights and how communist a government has become. Freedom of independent thinking, freedom of speech and the people’s diversity were taken in this new government.
In the story the government regulates everything, not just intelligence, but strength and beauty as well, and handicap people appropriately. The strong are forced to wear bags filled with lead balls; beautiful people are forced to wear masks so others would not feel unequal to them in looks. The overly intelligent are forced to wear radio transmitters in their ears, that are tuned to a government station that constantly bombards them with horrible sounds to scramble their

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