He terminate the towns and young people who have stopped having lotteries as “crazy fools,” or those who were against it and also he is threatened by the idea of change. He believes, irrationally, that the people who don’t want to do lottery anymore or want to stop will soon want to live in caves, Nonetheless h thinks only the lottery keeps society stable. He also says “Lottery in June, corn be heavy soon” and fears that if the lottery stops, the villagers will be forced to eat “chickweed and acorns.” This idea propose that stopping the lottery will lead us to or return to a much earlier time, when people hunted and gathered for their food. These unreasonable fears reveal that Old Man Warner has a strong belief in superstition. He undoubtedly accepts the way things are because this is how they’ve always been, and believes any change in the lottery will lead to disaster. He shows how dangerous it is to follow tradition blindly, never ask questions to old judgement, or beliefs that are passed down from one generation to the next …show more content…
Majority of them got kill and some of them died by giving up in their life. “The Lottery” is an example of following terrible tradition. Old Man Warner shows how dangerous it is to follow tradition blindly, never ask questions to old judgement, or beliefs that are passed down from one generation to the next generation, same as there is no reason why the villagers should be faithful to the black box and unfaithful to other historical object and traditions, same as there is no logical reason why the villagers should continue doing the lottery at all. People are losing their life. , they didn’t do anything wrong to other or trying to hurt someone in the story; however, they are just getting kill for no reason. People are just losing their family, friend’s life by dangerous people that out there in the