Forum Overview
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Peter Molyneux's The Movies
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Ooh, that's a good one. Also: Harrison Bergeron.
[quote name="Jerry Whorebach"]The first time I read <i>Harrison Bergeron</i> - as part of a language arts class in middle school - I took it at face value, as a caution against socialism, and assumed the author must be some kind of moron. It wasn't until years later, when I could put the story in context, that I realized Vonnegut was actually satirizing America's warped understanding of what socialism entails. Bergeron is essentially the <i>Airplane!</i> of objectivist literature, which I guess makes Vonnegut the Zucker Brothers of the literary world. [quote name="<a href="http://www2.ljworld.com/news/2005/may/05/vonnegut_lawyers_could/">Scott Rothschild</a>"]Topeka — When the Kansas Supreme Court takes up the school finance case next week, it might well ponder a futuristic story from the 1960s by science fiction satirist Kurt Vonnegut. Attorneys representing students from the Shawnee Mission district say the story "Harrison Bergeron" shows that a world of forced equality would be a nightmare, so unequal funding of public schools is OK. Their legal brief says capping local taxes on schools was unconstitutional, and they cited the 1961 story, which depicts a future society where everyone is made equal by forcing impediments on anyone who is better. "Nobody was smarter than anybody else," the attorneys quoted Vonnegut as writing. "Nobody was better looking than anybody else. But in a telephone interview Wednesday, Vonnegut told the Journal-World that the students' attorneys may have misinterpreted his story. "It's about intelligence and talent, and wealth is not a demonstration of either one," said Vonnegut, 82, of New York. He said he wouldn't want schoolchildren deprived of a quality education because they were poor. "Kansas is apparently handicapping schoolchildren, no matter how gifted and talented, with lousy educations if their parents are poor," he said.[/quote][/quote]