Utopias prove to be not beneficial to society. Many courts have had cases with the amish. In Wisconsin V Yoder, an amish man put the state of wisconsin under fire with his belief system. His beliefs are men shouldn’t go to school after the 8th grade. So to speak, a child with a maximum of an 8th grade education would leave school, get a job, and make a family. Well, in most cases, you need more than an 8th grade education to get a job. Also in the article “Why Utopias Fail”, its states that, “...utopia as the ultimate governance challenge.” From this, its best to say that a challenge brought upon one's …show more content…
As a part of human nature, people tend to want more than just the necessities. As in fruitlands, by the demise many people left due to unsatisfactory standards and items. So, people will not settle for just the basics. According to the article “Why Utopias Fail”, the bar is “constantly being raised” and, “Any land of milk and honey automatically attracted swords and muskets.”. From this we can conclude that the standard for a utopia will keep growing with the ages and when the norm will be promised to be above standards and turns out to be below a point, people will leave and eventually the utopia will be demolished. Some may argue that people must accept the basic needs, but we all know that people strive to rise above. Also, people may want to remain below the other but for a society to work and such, there needs to be someone who will strive and rise above the