A Brave New World Persuasive Essay

Words: 575
Pages: 3

John Zepke. As a double minority, I’m appalled by the disturbing regressions—or more aptly, the thinning of the veneer of equality lacquered over our nation—made in regards to race. It pains me more than anything to watch helplessly as Americans are torn, split at the widening divide; more so it pains me to witness social injustices occurring in this day and age, in this nation predicated on equal opportunity. There is absolutely no justification for the deprivation of anybody's human rights, and I hope someday to be a luminary who globally branches out to spur on change in areas desperately in need of help, or in the very least an aide for people in need. Are my expectations so unbelievably outlandish that I’ll end disappointing myself? Perhaps, but as the saying by Norman Vincent Peale goes: if I shoot for the moon, even if I miss, I’ll land upon and the stars. And rest assured, my telescope has been ready for years.
Superficially, the books I
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R. Martin’s A Song of Ice and Fire series along with Aldous Huxley’s and George Orwell’s magnum opuses: A Brave New World and 1984. I largely take refuge from the harsh realities of the world in my bedside trove of books and consistently prefer science fiction, which my book collection reflects. Some notable titles I’ve read include: Orson Scott Card’s Ender's Game, Pierce Brown’s Red Rising, and Daniel Keyes’s “Flowers for Algernon”; however, somehow I can’t manage to escape these underlying biases or cases of discrimination that fuel or inflame the conflict of these stories. Somehow, there always manages to be some group, race, or species that suffers from the