The pigs were dressing in clothes, living in the farmhouse and drinking. Which was putting themselves on a level that the humans who had lived on the farm before them had. While they were visibly excluding themselves from the group of other animals they were also verbally expressing how low they thought of the other animals who had built up essentially everything the pigs had, the other animals were made to move out of the way if a pig was walking down the same path they were, and the punishments that had once been eradicated during the beginning of the rebellion were being brought back. The pigs were whipping the other animals if they did something that Napoleon did not approve of. If it was not clear to the animals who were on the farm from their beginning what Napoleon thought of them it was clear …show more content…
Changing the name back was taking away the sense of rebellion that had happened not only letting the animals living on the new Manor Farm but the rest of the animals from neighboring farms now knew that rebellion did not work and they should not try it either. This only further suppressed the animals at this time, while Napoleon and the other pigs were thriving the rest were just being looked at as slave