In 1984, the readers experience the perspective of Winston, one who is in a pretty good position in the Party (gets to rewrite history, swag. kind of like that influencer bunny, also swag). However, unlike our cast in Lovely People, he is acutely aware of the dangers of Big Brother, and the audience understands how Horrible governmental control is because the audience and the protagonist empathizes with them. Unlike the homemaker bunny, he sees the socially/politically shunned and like...cares about it.
It just feels as if Minna included the World Council and their control as a way for the readers to be like "silly bunny! this is obviously Pretty Bad", which is not nearly as effective, in my opinion.
It's clear to the reader, and the protagonist, that the current system is Bad because it not only affects the protagonist, but also the people around them. I can't empathize with someone like the influencer bunny who only ditches her life of privilege and wealth because those things are revoked.
(i don't know, 1984 is just a lot better than Lovely People because the audience is acutely aware, for the entire novel, of how Bad this thing is. for part of it, i found myself thinking "well, teenbunny and husbunny have like, fairly fixable situations if they like, mass tweet propaganda" or "well, has christianbunny tried reading the inclusive bible? i mean, if you're reading the irl bible in English you literally are reading bible 2.0. hell, you could consider christianity the bible 2.0 to the jewish torah...)
People care about 1984 because the Party hurts people, hurts all people. I'm not religious, so maybe I'm being insensitive, but not being able to read your religious book is So Terrible and Exactly Like the Genocide of Uyghur People Right Now. I mean, when I attended church, a lot of them focused on the idea that your deeds and soul mattered more than being able to read or quote passages. From what I understand, having a bible is meant to be a source of comfort and used to reaffirm faith, but is by no means required. However, I was lucky to belong to a fairly liberal catholic church that actually likes Pope Francis....
I believe that Lovely People is more like Nosedive than 1984, though. I think that this comic could have been a pretty good interpretation of that concept, albeit scathingly unoriginal. However, like 1984, Nosedive was good because it is universally applied to Everyone, not just people who read the bible and dislike change. But, I feel like we've already decided that this comic was not intended to be good/worthwhile to everyone.