Napoleon isolates certain animals because he wants to be in control and have all the power. These animals are starting trouble and trying to make it so he has no control or power.
No, Napoleon didn't support free speech. 1. He limited the press to a few newspapers for propaganda to make Napoleon look favorable. 2. Napoleon creates a police state in France. Creates a spy system in France in which Fouche, chief of police, ruthlessly eliminated anyone to be found rebellious. This clearly was a indicator that Napoleon didn't favor Free speech.
Squealer (a persuasive propagandist) says that Napoleon would let the animals make their own decisions, but that they might make some "wrong" ones that would be harder to undo.
Napoleon takes the nine puppies from their mothers as soon as they are old enough- he takes them into a separate room from all the other animals where nobody can see them, and Napoleon says he is educating them. However, in a later chapter, we discover that he did not educate them, but trained them as attack dogs. He then uses them to make animals agree with him, as the animals are scared of these dogs.
Napoleon gains power by using fear, by exploiting the animals, and by bending the rules. He instills fear as a way of giving the animals no chance to argue with him... Which allows him to run the farm the way he wanted to, and to make it easier for him than the other animals.
The animals on the animal farm allowed Napoleon to take the dogs away from the parents resulting to him teaching the dogs to do his bidding which means that the farm is under the Napoleons control when their older. Napoleon uses them and, sends them after Snowball which then result to the farm having to listen to Napoleon unless he wants one of the animals wants to die or be banished.
In the beginning, the animals seek to make it a classless society with the set of rules that Snowball and Napoleon make. In the end, it is not, with the pigs the ruling class and the rest of the animals workers.
Primarily at fault for failing to make all of the animals truly equal lies with Napoleon, the pig that writes the Animal Farm code.
Snowball wanted to build a windmill to generate electricity and improve the animals' lives on the farm. Napoleon initially opposed the idea, viewing it as a threat to his power. The other animals were mostly in favor of the windmill, as they saw it as a way to make their lives easier and more comfortable.
I don't think you can make them breed, but I'm experimenting with other animals, and I found that if the two animals have green speech bubbles with a family symbol in it they will breed. So far only rabbits will breed.
Squealer portrays Napoleon as a heroic leader by emphasizing his supposed sacrifices and wisdom in guiding the farm, often using propaganda to twist the narrative in his favor. He presents Napoleon's decisions as essential for the animals' well-being, framing any dissent as betrayal. The animals, largely uneducated and reliant on Squealer's rhetoric, are swayed by his persuasive speeches, leading them to accept his version of events without question. Consequently, they view Napoleon as a savior rather than a tyrant, despite the growing hardships they face.
Napoleon called off Sunday morning meeting