What Is The Moral Lesson Of The Handmaid's Tale By Jkr

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Disclaimer: JKR owns her characters, plots, and world. But not mine :)
Extremely long AN: About people accepting Harry as being from the future so quickly… the students didn’t and neither did the ministry. The teachers were one over by the contract as the magic that created them is considered deadly in the extreme. Not quite black but the type of magic that if you tinker with it legend states your soul will be collected by the Wild Haunt, a myth that came pre-humanity. Soooo yeah that won over the teachers. The students were suspicious but followed their professors’ leads --though they still doubts about whether DADA prof is who he says he is. As for the government-- Umbridge disappeared for a week trying to turn the power of the ministry on Harry, but Harry got himself and his son legalized by Goblins and nobody screws with Goblin paperwork. Not to mention Harry got to Lucius before the Dark Lord had time to put his hands on the scales. I realized people had a lot of questions about that and my apologies. I am a first person writer and sometimes I forget I have a narrator's omnity to tell all sides of a story beyond the view a handful of main characters.
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To those who gave me longer responses this chapter is for you. Sorry to khonas who was looking forward to some softy chapters. I promise some longer scenes with more character development and fluff than by-all-the-holy-cows-does-Harry’s-life-always-have-to-be-on-fire? To which I say: He’s Harry Potter. Also, am I the only one who thought the next generation was too calm in A Cursed Child? I mean my Teddy is nuts and hardly mentioned in the play, can you imagine what’s going to happen when Harry spawns himself? Harry almost died every year of school, as an adult I can tell you the real world only gets crazier if you add kids to that

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