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Real Predictions Of The Future:
Chapter 14; The Time Machine
KRUTO: 1984. Coming Soon
George Orwell wrote «1984» in 1948. He depicted a bleak world where the state controls every step, rewrites the past, bends the truth, and even governs human thoughts. It was not just an anti-utopia — it was a warning. Decades have passed, yet the book has lost none of its power. It turned out not to be a prophecy for one specific year, but an eternal portrait of the nature of power and the weaknesses of human beings. In any country and in any era, there will always be those willing to tighten the noose of dictatorship — slowly, quietly, under the guise of care and order. And there will always be those who grow accustomed to that noose, until it becomes too tight to breathe. Today, when technology allows constant surveillance, when lies can spread faster than the truth, and when fear once again becomes a tool of control, «1984» reads like a news report from our own time.This song is a reminder that freedom is not lost overnight. It disappears step by step…
June 8, 1949 – George Orwell Publishes Nineteen Eighty-Four
On June 8, 1949, English writer George Orwell published his final novel, the dystopian masterpiece Nineteen Eighty-Four. Released in the aftermath of World War II and amid rising Cold War tensions, the book presented a chilling vision of a totalitarian future defined by surveillance, propaganda, and thought control.
The novel follows Winston Smith, a low-ranking Party member living under the watchful rule of “Big Brother,” where independent thought is considered a crime. Orwell’s work introduced enduring concepts such as “doublethink” and “thoughtcrime,” which have since become part of political and cultural vocabulary.
1984 quickly gained international attention for its warning about authoritarianism and remains one of the most influential political novels ever written.
Broken by Big Brother. Ending of 1984 Still Feels So Disturbing
So I finally finished 1984 and honestly… the ending was way darker than I expected. I kept hoping Winston would somehow escape or at least stay himself deep down, but that never happened. By the end of the book, the Party completely breaks him. And honestly, that might be the scariest part of the whole story.
The Ministry of Love chapters were really hard to read. The torture was bad enough, but what really got to me was how calm O’Brien acted while explaining the Party’s ideas. When he says “power is not a means; it is an end,” it made me realize the Party does not care about helping people or making life better. They only care about having control. That idea honestly felt disturbing to me.
The “2 + 2 = 5” part also stuck with me. At first it sounds ridiculous, but then I started thinking… what if someone heard lies over and over their whole life? What if everyone around them believed it too? Would they eventually start believing it? That part made me think a lot about how important truth really is.
Room 101 was probably the hardest scene for me to read. Winston spends the whole book trying to hold onto something real, especially his relationship with Julia. But when the rats are used against him, he completely breaks and begs for Julia to be punished instead. I kept thinking… would I do the same thing if someone used my biggest fear against me? I honestly do not know.
Looking back now, the coral paperweight feels a lot more important than it first seemed. Earlier in the book, it felt like a small symbol of the past and of something real that the Party could not change. But once it gets smashed, it almost feels like Winston himself is breaking too. The same thing happened with the room above the antique shop. It seemed safe and normal at first, but deep down I kept feeling like it would not last.
What really stuck with me is that the Party does not only want people to obey. They want people to actually believe them. By the end, Winston is not just pretending anymore; he really loves Big Brother. Somehow that felt worse than death because it means the Party took away the last part of who he was.
This book also made me think about today. Not in the exact same way as the book, but it made me think about how easy it can be for people to believe things they hear all the time without questioning them. It made me wonder how much fear, media, and other people influence the way we think.
I think the biggest thing I took away from 1984 is how important truth, memory, and individuality are. Winston slowly loses all of those things, and once he does, there is almost nothing left of him. That ending honestly stayed in my head after I finished the book. It made me keep wondering… what would happen if nobody remembered what was actually true anymore?
“We have now sunk to a depth at which the restatement of the obvious is the first duty of intelligent men.”
— George Orwell