The Hypocrisy Of Utopia

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A utopia is meant to be the perfect place, and the country of the kind is exactly that, for no one ever so much as commits a violent act against another. Yet, in punishing the protagonist for killing another individual the society has created a fate worse than death. Further, the society collectively shuns the protagonist, actively participating in a violent act to preserve the society. Yet, the protagonist feels empowered by his crimes that distance him away from society, despite his deep craving for companionship. The hypocrisy of the utopia expresses the impossibility of the utopia for its inability to provide for harm.
The protagonist considers his being shunned is a freedom, yet the reality it is his prison. He is pitiful as he is unable

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