Ensign_Redshirt said:
Any armed uprising in the US will be quickly put down by the military.
Not if the coup happens to be supported by at least parts of the military... which hasn't been explicitly ruled out in the series. Then you'll have a civil war at your hands. In any case, the movement seemed to have supporters in almost any segment of society.
Remember how the Roman Empire worked? Starting with Claudius, in 41 AD, it was the army who had the final say over who became Emperor. After that, whoever wanted the job was either a general in the army, or had the backing of the military (and that person had to have
very deep pockets to pay them, or they'd switch allegiance
thisfast). Don't say that can't happen now. It's happened in other countries, and I doubt the U.S. would be immune, under the right circumstances.
Ensign_Redshirt said:
WarpFactorZ said:
See, this is what tipped it for me. The episode implies they, too, just went along with the extreme fundamentalism of the group. His wife's ambitions? Ehn, who cares. Well, he does, according to some badly written dialogue, but then I guess he really doesn't when you watch the rest of the show.
Well, it's certainly possible that the Commander still saw the Giledean movement as the better alternative to maintaining the status quo, even if he didn't agree 100% with its goals. It's also quite possible of not likely that Gilead
gradually turned out to be more extreme than he had envisioned it himself, but when this point was reached it was already too late to turn back. It's also possible that the Commander grew more and more extreme himself in the years after Gilead was formed. His younger self from 10 years ago could have been more moderate than he is now.
Exactly. How many politicians agree 100% with the party leadership or with their colleagues? If they did, we wouldn't have just seen the conclusion of the CPC leadership race in Canada, with 14 candidates (yeah, I know O'Leary dropped out at the last minute), whose ideas run from Red Tory (Chong) to Trump-worshiping racist Kellie Leitch, to the Harper-clone who actually won (he's anti-same sex marriage, anti-abortion, anti-CBC, anti-basically every social reform the Liberals have made in the past 50 years).
WarpFactorZ said:
An "earth-shattering event" like widespread infertility is not going to open the door to a small group of domestic terrorists to destabilize the entire US government. Killing the President and most of Congress doesn't suddenly put the command of the entire country on a first-come first-serve basis. Everyone knows either Keifer Sutherland or Mary McDonnell will step in.
You do realize they're just actors, right? And that life isn't always like a spy/secret agent show?
The mantra of the Reform Party in Alberta was "grass-roots support." It's not unreasonable that the Gilead movement could also have had grass-roots support. In real life, in Canada, that expanded over the course of years to the point where (under the Canadian Alliance name, headed by a fundamentalist, anti-science pastor named Stockwell Day), they elected enough MPs to become the Official Opposition (after seesawing with the Bloc). And then came the "Unite the Right" movement which culminated in the hijacking of the Progressive Conservatives when Peter MacKay backstabbed David Orchard (he'd promised not to hand the party over to the Alliance, but he went back on his word... in return for a succession of cabinet posts under Stephen Harper). Harper and cronies tried to take over the Progressive Conservative name, along with the party, but the remaining PCs stood up and said "No." That resulted in my doing a 180 turn, by the way. I never used to have much respect for Joe Clark. But now? I might even vote for him, if he were to come back to politics. I know he wouldn't be running for the Reformacons.
2006-2015 is known by many left-wing people in Canada as "the Dark Decade", when Stephen Harper gradually made the PMO more powerful, more secretive, he became more controlling of his own MPs to the point where dozens of them weren't allowed to attend the all-candidates' election forums in 2011 (unscripted questions from an unvetted audience meant he couldn't control what made it out to the public, y'know), and then the scientists were muzzled and whole science libraries were literally trashed. Electoral irregularities were a constant under the Reformacons, and thank goodness the ABC (Anyone But Conservatives) movement worked in 2015. I'd hate to see the Canada that would have resulted if Harper hadn't been got rid of. And now his replacement is just like him. I do know that a lot of his people wouldn't mind at all if a society like Gilead were to come about, as they're the ones ranting that Trudeau's wife should "stay home with the kids" instead of accompanying him to diplomatic events and doing her own public speaking and charity work.
I enjoy the show from a science fiction perspective, but it's about as likely to happen as a zombie apocalypse.
Remember the Tea Party Republicans who were saying that women shouldn't have the right to vote? Margaret Atwood didn't put anything in that novel that hasn't either already happened somewhere in the world in past history, or that wasn't already going on when she wrote it in the '80s. There have always been some backward people who don't think anyone but taxpaying white male citizens should be allowed to vote.
And at times it did seem to me as though some politicians were using it as a how-to manual, or at least a list of suggestions in how to set up a theocracy in the U.S.