Faking a liver condition, Yossarian checks into the medical clinic and takes a break by controlling mail and fashioning “Washington Irving” to authentic armed force correspondence. The mad bombardier utilizes elective measures to keep away from battle flights. Yet this act demonstrates sanity and thus demands further flying. The best way to be grounded is to request it. Doc Daneeka replies that Yossarian’s appeal is baseless because, as per army regulation Catch-22, insane men who ask to be grounded prove themselves sane through a priority for private safety. Genuinely insane individuals are the individuals who promptly consent to fly more missions. With a growing hatred of flying, Yossarian pleads with Doc Daneeka to ground him on the plea of insanity. All Yossarian needs is to finished his deployment and be sent home. However, because the glory-seeking Colonel Cathcart continually raises the amount of required missions, the lads of the “fighting 256th squadron” must keep on fighting. Paranoid and odd, Yossarian accepts that everybody around him is attempting to kill him. We see that Yossarian finds out that it could be possible for him to be discharged from military service by reason of insanity. Catch-22 is a law that is depicted in a number of different ways in this novel.
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