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...hers (Baker 77). As the controller of Brave New World would say, “…;they’re so conditioned that they practically can’t help behaving as they ought to behave” (Huxley, 220). Not only is the society conditioned, but they also have no individuality and must conform to society. This society has five classes of people, which creates no individuality. The classes range from Alphas, the most intelligent, to the Epsilons, the least intelligence (Napierkowski, 59). The clothes of the different classes also exemplifies that there is no individuality. All Alphas wear gray, Betas maroon, Deltas khaki, Gammas green, and Epsilons black (Higdon 2). According to Robert S. Baker, “…each person is incapable of expressing opinions or judgments of his own since these are, in theory and indeed usually in practice, non-existent;” (77). The Controller also tells of how conformed the people are, when he tells John, the “Savage” that, “The world’s stable now. People are happy; they get what they want, and they never want what they can’t get. They’re well off; they’re safe; they’re never ill; they’re not afraid of death; they’re blissfully ignorant of passion and old age…” (Huxley 220). Getting rid of free will did have an effect on the so-called outcasts of the society though. Bernard Marx, and Helmholtz Watson are the rebels or outcasts. They question the “not-to-be questioned values”(Higdon 2). Unlike most Alphas, Bernard Marx hates the attitude of casual sex, and sports. He wants to be alone and has emotional differences (Napierkowski 58). Helmholtz Watson, and Alpha-plus, is aggravated with society because it limits he writing capabilities. He be...