Those watching
"The Handmaid's Tale" on Hulu cannot be faulted for thinking they might be living a cyncial version of the old 1940s
"Road"
pictures with Bing Crosby, Bob Hope, and Dorothy Lamour. (Who gave her
that name?!) A movie called "The Road to Gilead." Emily Peck has other
ideas, but there are portents that cannot be denied.
“The Handmaid’s Tale” resonates, but there’s reason for hope.
You’d
have to be fairly clueless about the current political moment not to
feel a shiver of recognition watching “The Handmaid’s Tale,” the new
dystopian drama on Hulu.
Based
on Margaret Atwood’s bestselling novel, the show debuted Wednesday
after weeks of politically fueled anticipation. The timing is apt. The
action takes place in Gilead, a fictional future America that has been
taken over by a fundamentalist group of men who systematically strip
away women’s rights.
That description might remind viewers of President Donald Trump’s first
Monday
in office when, surrounded by other men, he signed off on the global
gag rule ― an anti-abortion order that restricts women’s reproductive
rights around the world. Or, perhaps it also brings to mind Vice
President Mike Pence, who chooses not to socialize alone with women who
are not his wife.
Even
Trump fanatics saw the connection, calling the show anti-Trump propaganda.
Peck
is pretty optimistic positing that the road to Gilead is fraught with
lots of potholes and obstructions, but we do well not to focus too
narrowly on the falling rock on one side of the highway thereby missing the
sheer cliff on the other side.
I am not watching
"The Handmaid's Tale,"
much as I would like to. I simply refuse to pay another dollar beyond
my already expensive FiOS service, so Hulu and Netflix are out for me. I
have, however, read the book. The coincidence of the airing of the
mini-series with the Democratic "Unity Tour" should set off some bells
and whistles.
This is the axiom Peck offers that Bernie supporters continue to reject.
"Progress does not happen in a straight line. Setbacks are inevitable. What’s critical is what comes next."
They
rejected it during the 2016 primaries renouncing any and all
incremental policies proposed by Hillary Clinton's campaign and stubbornly continued their opposition during the general election. They
persist in their unwillingness to allow the Democratic Party to evolve
naturally and have set out to take it over and overturn the common sense
principles that have been its warp and woof since the groundbreaking
days of FDR. Rather than empowering women, the party is rolling back
its liberating positions on women under the influence of a man who
refuses to join the party. No, this is not a relitigation or extension
of the 2016 primaries. It is a fight for the future.
The
parallels between the dystopia Atwood projected and perceived potential
effects of the new administration are not limited to Trump's positions
and those of his cronies. The BernieBros continue to have a hand in
suppressing female issues, concerns, and voices within the only party
likely to continue to highlight them.
Women have a stake in resisting efforts on either side to curtail our rights and freedoms. Re
sisters
must do it for ourselves. But we must be careful not to lose the
party. That is where the strength is. The reason the BernieBots are
fighting to usurp that power is because they know that a third party
will have no muscle except to do what they have done in 2000 and 2016 -
split the progressive vote.
We must remember that there was a
reason why, at the end of her senior thesis, Hillary Clinton spurned
Saul Alinsky's methods (i.e. change from without the system rather than
within) as well as the job he offered her and opted for the discipline
of law school instead. We have to be in it to win it.
Leaving the
party is no solution. Think hard before you do that because it is not
only the Trump crowd that would happily see us in shades of red, blue,
green, and stripes according to their designations of how we serve. We
cannot determine our fate from the outside. The Bernie crowd knows
this, and that is why they fight to take over the party. Let's not just
abandon it to them.
Crossposted at
The Department of Homegirl Security.