The Influence Of The Government In The Hunger Games By Suzanne Collins

810 Words4 Pages

Let's put a stop to the Hunger Games Picture a world where everyone is divided into 12 districts, thousands of people are poor, starving, and dying. A world where the government completely ignores these apparent issues and instead holds annual hunger games taking 24 children, a boy, and a girl from each district, and making them fight to the death while the whole nation watches. In the novel, The Hunger Games by Suzanne Collins this terrifying world becomes a reality. Citizens of Panem ages 12 to 18 are entered into a drawing, and every year two children are picked to compete in a brutal competition that only ends when there is one child left in the arena. The government in the hunger games believes that by having harsh and unfair laws …show more content…

Disobedience is not tolerated at all by the capitol, breaking the law even slightly can have you killed. The children who are picked to compete in the games must go, if someone tried to stop this it would not end well for them or their district. Collins describes this government control by writing “Whatever words they use, the real message is clear. “Look how we take your children and sacrifice them and there's nothing you can do. If you lift a finger, we will destroy every last one of you. Just as we did in district thirteen.” (pg 19) Panem once had thirteen districts but after defiance toward the capitol, they were completely wiped out. The capitol uses this power to force people to watch and compete in the hunger games to show everyone that the districts are no match for the capitol's …show more content…

They believe winning the games to be a great honor. These districts train their children for the games so when they come of age they are much stronger and more experienced than the other districts. Collins describes these tributed by writing “career tributes are overly vicious, arrogant, better fed, nut only because they're the capitols lapdogs” (pg 161) these tributes are trained all their life fed and inspired to do their best, they are told that the games are an honor so they spend their lives training so they can win. This makes them into a killing machine taking away their innocence and their