By looking around, it is easy to notice racism, bigotry, and class warfare between everyone. A kid gets harassed because they are attracted to the same sex. A man gets shot simply because he is black. A teenage girl is attacked because she is an Atheist. Although the same events that happen in Lee’s novel may not happen in today’s world, the underlying problem of racism, bigotry, and class warfare, can still be seen. Harper Lee shows in her novel that all of that could be solved simply by walking around in other people’s shoes to understand that they are also humans with feelings, emotions, and loved ones. If people could just realize that the gay kid, the black man, the atheist girl, and everyone else they encounter are not much different from themselves, the world would be a better, safer, more loving place to live in. In To Kill A Mockingbird, so many lives could have been spared if they were seen as people, not discriminated by the color of their…