What Are The Ethical Issues In The Veldt

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The children in The Veldt had a great reliance on material items. Bradbury used the son, Peter, to show how the kids relied on technology to do everything for them. Peter “didn’t like it when you took out the picture painter last month” (Bradbury 20). The kids had grown up in an environment in which their parents provided them with anything they wanted. By spoiling their children, the kids had no understanding of people who struggled in the world. They had no idea what it was like to live without excessive amounts of helpful technology. This led to the children becoming ethically and morally uncompassionate, for they couldn’t understand and refused to cooperate without technology.
The Hadley children, Wendy and Peter, had an overreliance on the nursery. This overreliance led them to making unethical decisions.
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Since Peter and Wendy had such a great reliance on this item, they would do anything to not let their parents “switch off the nursery and the house” (Bradbury 26). Having an overreliance on the nursery led the Hadley children to making unethical decisions, such as locking their parents away and doing anything to stop them from accessing technology.
After the father, George Hadley, started to turn off the technology in the house, the children began to loose their temper. Since they relied on the technology in the house for the daily life, they couldn’t handle the idea of a house without it. Peter, George’s son, began to scream at his father and the house itself. Peter began to say cruel things to his father, such as “I hate you!” (Bradbury 24). Peter continued to make unethical comments, as he wished death upon his father. Peter had a huge overreliance on