Individuals regularly ceaselessly judge individuals without genuinely understanding their experience. Everybody does that unknowingly. By simply taking a gander at a man, individuals expect as opposed to know the individual's identity. In the book The Outsiders by S.E Hinton, Ponyboy and the Greasers posse live in the poor piece of town, also called the East Side. They are confronted with numerous battles every day particularly in light of the fact that they are Greasers, yet their number one issue was the Socs, the rich children, who lived in the West Side of the town. In this novel, Ponyboy clarifies his battles as a Greaser by name, yet is a touchy youthful fourteen year old truly. In light of appearance keeps the capacity to genuinely comprehend …show more content…
Truly Bob kicked the bucket, yet Johnny did not kill Bob, but rather utilized his switch cutting edge as a self protection instrument. "Randy shook his head. "I saw it. You were nearly suffocated. It was the dark headed fellow that had the switchblade. Sway frightened him into doing it. I saw it." "(165) The Greasers did not expect this, but rather Randy , a Socs, was guarding them and that a Soc is not all that not the same as a Greaser. Both Socs and Greasers have emotions, yet attempt to cover them making them look extreme, yet in actuality, it is the inverse. "I investigated him. He was seventeen or something like that, yet he was at that point old. Like Dallas was old. Cherry had said her companions were excessively cool, making it impossible to feel anything, but then she could watched nightfalls. Randy should be excessively cool, making it impossible to feel anything, but then there was agony in his eyes." (115-116) This shows how Greasers and Socs are fundamentally the same, yet diverse in the meantime. Every one of them are people, so why treat Socs like lords and rulers and Greasers like refuse? Socs do have cash, however that does not imply that Greasers ought to be given more terrible disciplines than Socs. They all have emotions, yet no one is truly eager to open up or to truly comprehend what genuinely is going on in someone else's