God is non-existent, for there is no need for a deity. They are encouraged to have sex with people of the other sex frequently, even daily, changing from one partner to another with no binding between them, no marriage (another dirty word). They are well off, they’re safe, they are never ill, they’re made to not be afraid of death, suffer none of the disabilities of old age, have no passions that disturb other cultures, not plagued with relationships to mothers, fathers, wives, children, in fact these are dirty words that offend them. They are thereby engineered to believe what society wants them to believe, to be happy with life in the brave new world, to get what they learnt to want, and never want what they can’t get. They hear the voices for many years repeating the “truths” over and over again. This is done primarily by causing children to hear voices while they are sleeping, nightly courses of orthodoxies drumming into their minds telling them what their society considers to be true, what they want the child to believe when they mature. People are conditioned, as if they are hypnotized with free will being abolished, so that they can’t help behaving as they ought to behave. He said that under their system, there was social stability. I found that the leader of the brave new world explains his view why the totalitarian highly organized new world made sense. If you read the book (it’s not a long book you could read it in one day) and it’s very, very interesting, you realize that we’re there already.” Even the speed limit would be too fast for them but this proves that people are not interested in safety but comfort. If they did they wouldn’t fly right past you on the road. I think Brave new world is more true… People don’t really care about safety. But an even better book is Brave New World by Aldous Huxley. 1984 was all about in the name of (personal) safety (society was) taking all our rights. I got a copy of it along with Huxley’s Brave New World Revisited and found that I agreed with my friend. I was surprised that I hadn’t read Brave New World. After I reviewed Animal Farm and 1984, a friend wrote to me telling me his opinion that Aldous Huxley‘s Brave New World was a better book than George Orwell’s 1984.
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