Read The Excerpt From ""Harrison Bergeron."" “I Think I’d Make A Good Handicapper General.” “Good As Anybody Else,” Said George. “Who Knows Better’n I Do What Normal Is?” Said Hazel. “Right,” Said George. He Began To Think Glimmeringly About His Abnormal Son Who Was Now In Jail, About Harrison, But A Twenty-One-Gun Salute In His Head Stopped That. How Does The Dialogue Between George And Hazel Develop Kurt Vonnegut’s Message That Advanced Technology Dehumanizes Individuals? Hazel And George Do Not Discuss Their Feelings About The Arrest Of Their Son. George Thinks About Their Son Who Was Recently Taken To Jail. George Agrees That Hazel Would Be A Good Handicapper General. Hazel Believes That The Handicapper General Is Average.. His thoughts fled in panic, like bandits from a burglar alarm. The dialogue between george and hazel in kurt vonnegut's harrison bergeron illustrates the author's message that advanced technology dehumanizes individuals by.

His thoughts fled in panic, like bandits from a burglar alarm. “that was a real pretty dance, that dance they just did,” said hazel. It was tragic, all right, but george and hazel couldn’t think about it very hard.