Skip to content
Search AI Powered

Latest Stories

The 'Handmaid's Tale' Is Trending Once Again After Alabama Passes Abortion Ban

The 'Handmaid's Tale' Is Trending Once Again After Alabama Passes Abortion Ban
PA Viral

After Alabama voted for a near-total ban on abortion, the title of Margaret Atwood’s novel "The Handmaid’s Tale" began trending on social media, with many opponents drawing comparisons to the dystopian classic.

The state's Republican-dominated Senate voted 25-6 for the bill, which, if approved by its governor, would become the country’s most stringent law on abortion.


The bill would block abortions in the event of rape and incest, and features an exception only for when the health of the person carrying the fetus is at serious risk

Within hours, Google searches for "The Handmaid’s Tale" were up and many took to Twitter to make comparisons with the book, which was recently dramatized in the popular TV series.

The story focuses on an imagined future when an authoritarian government named Gilead attains control of the former United States. With fertility rates falling, those women able to conceive become Handmaids, forced to submit to ritualized rape to bear children for "powerful" men and their wives.

Writer Caitlin Moran shared an image of the 22 male senators who voted against an exception for rape or incest, adding: “Gilead is being brought to you by the following people.”

Similarly, lawyer Dr. Ann Olivarius posted: “They all read The Handmaid’s Tale and thought it was a set of instructions?”

Emmy Bengston, a communications worker for Democratic presidential hopeful Kirsten Gillibrand tweeted a picture showing “Alabama” trending on Twitter, alongside a host of sport-related topics.

Along with it, she wrote: “I keep thinking about the flashback scene in Handmaid’s Tale when the women characters lose their jobs and bank accounts and instinctively know what it means and what’s coming, and most people – especially the men – are kind of oblivious and don’t take it seriously.”

Representative Terri Collins, the bill’s sponsor, said the bill recognized the “baby in the womb is a person”. The Republican Senators said they are intentionally seeking a conflict with the 1973 landmark US Supreme Court decision Roe v. Wade, which legalized abortion nationally, as they hope it will lead to an effort to overturn it across all states.

Meanwhile, people in other countries are recognizing the danger of bills like the one in Alabama. British journalist Helen Lewis tweeted: "For anyone horrified by Alabama's proposed abortion ban, or calling it Gilead. Look closer to home! Northern Ireland does not permit abortions even in cases of rape, incest or fatal foetal abnormality. The ONLY exception is endangerment to a woman's life."

Abortion laws in the Ireland are devolved to the Northern Ireland Assembly, which has been suspended since 2017.

For anyone with questions of what this means, and where to find clinics and doctors to answer them, go to plannedparenthood.org/learn/abortion

More from

A young girl sitting at the edge of a pier.
a woman sits on the end of a dock during daytime staring across a lake
Photo by Paola Chaaya on Unsplash

People Break Down The Most Painful Sentence Someone's Ever Said To Them

In an effort to get children to stop using physical violence against one another, they are often instructed to "use [their] words".

Of course, words run no risk of putting people in the hospital, or landing them in a cast.

Keep ReadingShow less
Sean Duffy; Screenshot of Kim Kardashian
Howard Schnapp/Newsday RM via Getty Images; Hulu

Even Trump's NASA Director Had To Set Kim Kardashian Straight After She Said The Moon Landing 'Didn't Happen'

Transportation Secretary Sean Duffy—who is also NASA's Acting Administrator—issued the weirdest fact-check ever when he corrected reality star Kim Kardashian after she revealed herself to be a moon landing conspiracist.

Conspiracy theorists have long alleged the moon landing was fabricated by NASA in what they claim was an elaborate hoax—and Kardashian certainly made it clear where she stands in a video speaking to co-star Sarah Paulson on the set of the new Hulu drama All’s Fair.

Keep ReadingShow less
Someone burning money
Photo by Jp Valery on Unsplash

Biggest Financial Mistakes People Make In Their 20s

It can be really fun to experience something for the first time that you've never really had before, like a disposable income.

For the average person, there isn't generally a lot of excess money to spend frivolously when they're a child, so when they hit their twenties and have their first "real" or "more important" job, they might find themselves in a position to enjoy some of the finer things in life.

Keep ReadingShow less
Kid Rock
Chip Somodevilla/Getty Images

Special Olympics Fires Back At Kid Rock With Powerful Statement After He Used 'The R-Word' To Describe Halloween Costume

MAGA singer Kid Rock was called out by Loretta Claiborne, the Chief Inspiration Officer of the Special Olympics, after he used the "r-word"—a known ableist slur—to describe his Halloween costume this year.

Kid Rock, whose real name is Robert James Ritchie, was speaking with Fox News host Jesse Watters when he donned a face mask and said he'd be going as a "r**ard" for Halloween. Watters had guessed he was dressed as Dr. Anthony Fauci, the former director of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases who spearheaded the nation's COVID-19 pandemic response.

Keep ReadingShow less

Foreigners Explain Which Things About America They Thought Were A Myth

Every country has its own way of doing things, and what's expected and accepted will vary from place to place.

But America is one of those places that people who have never been there can't help but be curious about. After all, some of the headlines are pretty wild sometimes!

Keep ReadingShow less