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The Child In The Punishment By David Brooks Summary

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The Child In The Punishment By David Brooks Summary
Towards the end of the story we learn that not everyone stays in Omelas some leave Omelas to an unpredictable world, “at times one of the adolescents girls or boys who go see the child does not go home to weep or rage, does not, in fact, go home at all.” (Le Guin pp. 15) Some may leave because they can’t be apart of something that they do not agree with even if it’s for their own happiness. As stated in a newspaper article “The Child in the Basement” by David Brooks, Brooks believes, “They walk away from prosperity, and they make some radical commitment. They would rather work toward some inner purity.” (David Brooks) Others may feel responsible, sicken, angry that they are living day by day in a system that is suppose to for the happiness

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