Skip to content
Search AI Powered

Latest Stories

Someone Just Tried To Mansplain 'The Handmaid's Tale' To Its Author—And Got Shut All The Way Down

Someone Just Tried To Mansplain 'The Handmaid's Tale' To Its Author—And Got Shut All The Way Down
Hulu - David Livingston/Stringer/Getty Images - @Modbrat/Twitter

Generally speaking, the foremost expert on any piece of work is the person who created it.

That is, unless, you're "some random guy" on Twitter.

Then obviously you're the expert.

Yup, sarcasm.


Margaret Atwood, author of The Handmaid's Tale, came up against her very own "some random guy" just a few short days ago. For those who have not read her work or seen Hulu's take on it, The Handmaid's Tale chronicles a dystopian United States where religion has taken over and forced reproduction is par for the course.

Women are routinely kidnapped, raped, beaten, forced into reproductive servitude, etc... all in the name of religion.

When Ms. Atwood wrote it, she didn't imagine that it would become as horrifyingly accurate as it has. Women are being criminally tried for miscarriages.

Total abortion bans with no exceptions for rape or incest are being pushed. Lawmakers with no understanding of how the body works are trying to force medical procedures that don't exist and are likely to kill the mother. Pregnant women are being referred to as "host bodies."

Here we are, staring down the barrel of Gilead.

Which, in case you were wondering, is not a good thing.

Giphy

Through this all, Margaret Atwood has been outspoken about how terrifyingly wrong things are going, particularly because the parallels to her work of horror-fiction have become undeniable. A few days ago she shared an article about Marshae Jones.

Marshae was shot in the abdomen during an argument when she was five months pregnant. The shooter was let go without any charges, but Marshae—the shooting victim—was charged in the death of her unborn child.

Police and lawmakers in Alabama stated that Marshae alone, not the person who pulled the trigger and shot her, was responsible for the fetal demise. After massive public outcry the charges were dropped.

But imagine if social media and activism hadn't managed to intervene.

Worldwide there are countless women currently jailed for miscarriages. Marshae Jones narrowly missed being one of them. Margaret Atwood, like many others, sees the warning signs clearly.

Here is her tweet:

Enter random guy—who we would like to think is just trolling, but honestly does that make this better or worse?—we aren't sure.

Either way, he decided to poke at Atwood's tweet with this gem:

Normally, after a tweet this asinine we would include a reaction GIF.

No need this time, though.

Twitter did it for us.

Repeatedly.







GIFs weren't Twitter's only response, though.

Things got interesting in the comments section as people tried to explain where his tweet went so off the rails and were met with his utter confusion. Then, in what people assume is an attempt to gain more followers, he started retweeting literally anything he was tagged in.

We aren't sure he grasps how Twitter works—or how trolling works, for that matter.














So, listen, if you're going to troll—do better.

There was a time in ye olde glory days of internet when trolling required some intellect and wit. If you're going to mansplain; don't. If you're going to mansplain and then try to CYA by attempting to turn it into trolling, then extra super don't.

It's not a good look for anyone.

Margaret Atwood's bestseller, The Handmaid's Tale, is available here. You can also get the book as a graphic novel, available here. Or learn about it here.

Atwood's new book, The Testaments, can be pre-ordered here.

"In this brilliant sequel to The Handmaid's Tale, acclaimed author Margaret Atwood answers the questions that have tantalized readers for decades. When the van door slammed on Offred's future at the end of The Handmaid's Tale, readers had no way of telling what lay ahead for her—freedom, prison or death. With The Testaments, the wait is over."

More from Trending

Screenshot of Sanae Takaichi and Donald Trump
MS Now

Room Goes Silent After Trump Makes Super Tone-Deaf Joke To Japanese Prime Minister About Pearl Harbor In Shocking Video

The audience in the Oval Office went silent after President Donald Trump made a tone-deaf joke about the attack on Pearl Harbor to Japanese Prime Minister Sanae Takaichi following a question about why he kept his attack on Iran a "surprise."

Trump was wrapping up a Q&A with reporters during a bilateral meeting with Takaichi when a Japanese journalist pressed him on why key allies—like Japan—were not notified ahead of the attack on Iran on February 28.

Keep ReadingShow less
Screenshots from @torimosser's TikTok video
@torimosser/TikTok

Woman Says Stranger On TikTok Helped Save Her Life After Dangerous Medical Misdiagnosis

It is far too common for women's health concerns to be dismissed in the United States, especially when it comes to chronic conditions and pain levels.

Diagnosed with several chronic conditions, 23-year-old TikToker Tori Mosser reflected on years of painful stomach cramps and painful episodes when she finally was able to share that she'd received a diagnosis: Cyclic Vomiting Syndrome (CVS).

Keep ReadingShow less
Images from u/South-Basket-887's post in the 'Mildly Infuriating' subReddit
u/South-Basket-887/Reddit

Landlord Sparks Debate After Warning Tenant About Leaving Small Appliances Plugged In

Many of us have had to live in a rented space at some point in our lives and had to deal with landlords, some of whom can be very imposing and let the power of having tenants go to their heads.

But most of us probably didn't receive special notes from our landlords detailing the little observations they noticed about our lifestyles while doing a surprise inspection.

Keep ReadingShow less
Mark Zuckerberg
Celal Gunes/Anadolu via Getty Images

Meta Is Shutting Down Its VR 'Metaverse' After Spending An Obscene Amount Of Money Building It—And People Are Roasting Mark Zuckerberg Hard

Meta CEO Mark Zuckerberg was roasted online after Meta announced they'll be shutting down Horizon Worlds, part of their virtual reality "Metaverse," this summer after spending close to $80 billion on the project.

The news comes five years after Zuckerberg declared the metaverse to be the future of Facebook, even renaming the company Meta to reflect that vision. In recent months, Meta cut roughly 10% of the workforce in its "metaverse" division and signaled a shift away from virtual reality for its flagship platform, Horizon Worlds, where users interact through avatars.

Keep ReadingShow less
Screenshots of Rand Paul and Markwayne Mullin
C-SPAN3

Video Of GOP Senator Picking A Fight With A Witness Replayed During Contentious Senate Confirmation Hearing

Kentucky Republican Senator Rand Paul confronted his GOP colleague, Oklahoma's Markwayne Mullin, President Donald Trump's pick for Secretary of Homeland Security, over his "anger issues," even presenting video evidence.

Earlier this month, Trump announced he will replace Kristi Noem as Homeland Security Secretary with Mullin. Trump said Noem will instead take on the role of Special Envoy to the Shield of the Americas, a newly created organization intended to foster a right-wing alliance across South America.

Keep ReadingShow less