
Originally Posted by
The Atheist
I suspect they would have ended up in Room 101 also.
And later a bullet through the brain, like Winston?

Originally Posted by
The Atheist
Parsons may have done as well, because it's important to note that the Party had no degrees of crime or punishment - there is only one crime: thoughtcrime, and it's possible that complete re-education was carried out on any imperfection.
Does 'complete re-education' necessarily include a bullet through the brain?
If there are 'no degrees of crime or punishment', how would you explain the following passages?
To be caught with a prostitute might mean five years in a forced−labour camp: not more, if you had committed no other offence.
One literally never saw them except in the guise of prisoners, and even as prisoners one never got more than a momentary glimpse of them. Nor did one know what became of them, apart from the few who were hanged as war−criminals: the others simply vanished, presumably into forced−labour camps.
The guards, too, treated the common criminals with a certain forbearance, even when they had to handle them roughly. There was much talk about the forced−labour camps to which most of the prisoners expected to be sent. It was 'all right' in the camps, he gathered, so long as you had good contacts and knew the ropes.
No word in the B vocabulary was ideologically neutral. A great many were euphemisms. Such words, for instance, as joycamp (forced−labour camp) or Minipax Ministry of Peace, i. e. Ministry of War) meant almost the exact opposite of what they appeared to mean.
Are you suggesting the existence of 'forced−labour camps' is merely Inner Party propaganda?!