I had not thought of it that way, the book and your posing are utopian.
If everybody thinks like I do the world will be transformed, no evil. Peace.
That is the Christian mantra among others.
On paper the Soviet Union looked very good. Wants and needs met equitably. No classes or privileged groups. No economic exploitation. Here in the USA initially it was looked on as a utopia, workers liivng in a workers' paradise. Until the realities became known.
IMO the fundamental mistake the communists made was ignoring human nature. they thought social engineering and mass indoctrination in school would usher in a new reality, and it failed.
Even in the harsh North Korea religion can not be stamped out. Forced or sociably engineered conformity does not work.
China today ends up harshly punish mg those who choose to question the political conformity, and it still goes on. There is a free speech/press movement in China.
So your idea that the world is heeding towards your ideal state with no evil does not comport with reality. If we have uncoerced free choice, there will be people who choose to differ.
Which is why the western liberal post WWII democratizes work even given the negatives. It tolerates a wide range of beliefs and ideas. It provides an historically unprecedented amount of goods for the masses. Good food 24/7. Current affordability issues aside.
So, the book and you provide interesting abstract debate, but in practical terms useless. iI gets us nowhere.
Trump is an example. He gets more horrible and erratic everyday. Yet he was elected by voters making a free unncoercedchoice.
In communist systems choices are limited and wrong choices are punished.
In 1984 language is reduced and controlled to limit the capacity of the people to frame and communicate contrary ideas. Newspeak.
en.wikipedia.org
As a constructed language, Newspeak is a language of planned phonology, limited grammar, and finite vocabulary, much like the phonology, grammar, and vocabulary of Basic English (British American Scientific International Commercial English), which was proposed by the British linguist Charles Kay Ogden in 1930. As a controlled language without complex constructions or ambiguous usages, Basic English was designed to be easy to learn, to sound, and to speak, with a vocabulary of 850 words composed specifically to facilitate the communication of facts, not the communication of abstract thought. While employed as a propagandist by BBC during the Second World War (1939–1945), Orwell grew to believe that the constructions of Basic English, as a controlled language, imposed functional limitations upon the speech, the writing, and the thinking of the users.[5]
Free chioce and your ideas are mutially exclusive. Unless yiu want us to become an ant colny.