Lede
Say Gilead and people roll eyes. Then read the orders, the funding freezes, the declarations. Quiet steps count.
What does not make sense
- States’ rights on stage, federal levers backstage. Title X freezes, overseas gag rules, and a shiny declaration saying there is no international right to abortion. Pick a lane or call it control.
- FDA told to take another look while the same agency approves another mifepristone generic. Review as traffic cone. Progress in one hand, brake pedal in the other.
- Family values sell the story, but clinic maps decide the ending. Budgets are destiny. Freeze the money, shrink the choices.
- Promise freedom, then rejoin clubs built to limit it. Family values as in: the state chooses the family.
- Culture-war speeches get headlines. Procurement letters and grant notices move reality. The boring pages are the sharp ones.
Sense check / The numbers
- The US renewed membership in the Geneva Consensus Declaration on 24 Jan 2025. The declaration asserts there is no international right to abortion and elevates a particular family policy frame. This was an early second-term move.
- Title X turbulence in 2025: grantees reported funding withheld or frozen, with knock-on effects for cancer screening and contraception access in low-income clinics. A map of losses tells the story.
- Medication abortion pressure: new generic mifepristone approved in Oct 2025 even as HHS signalled tighter scrutiny paths and activists pushed for limits. Policy goes one step forward, one back.
- Pattern, not prophecy: The Handmaid’s Tale TV series ran 2017 to 27 May 2025, ending after six seasons; book from 1985. Both centre state control of reproduction. Parallels exist; they are not equivalence. Facts first.
Synopsis roast – The Handmaid’s Tale – TV series (2017–2025)
Hulu’s The Handmaid’s Tale widens Atwood’s tight lens into a national map of bureaucracy, ritual, and small defiance. After a coup, Gilead reduces fertile women to state property. June (Elisabeth Moss) survives, resists, then bites back. The show widens the book’s close lens into a map of cruelty, bureaucracy, and small acts of defiance. Awards followed; so did the lazy headline “We live in Gilead.” We don’t. The finale closed the arc in May 2025. The show is a cultural yardstick. A way to measure drift, not declare the destination.
Synopsis roast – the book – The Handmaid’s Tale by Margaret Atwood (1985)

Atwood’s novel is a slow suffocation disguised as literature. You live inside Offred’s skull, trapped with her fragmented memories and the dull terror of routine as a theocracy turns the female body into government property. There are no grand speeches or cinematic uprisings here, just small humiliations that stack like bricks in a moral prison. Every gesture —kneeling, whispering, averting eyes — feels like state-approved choreography.
Atwood never shouts; she whispers until you can’t breathe. Her world is bureaucratic evil at its most polite: guards who say “Blessed be the fruit” before assault, priests who draft rape as sacrament, women renamed as possessions of men — Of-Fred, Of-Glen — so identity itself becomes a filing category. The prose is surgical, not sentimental. It cuts, then cauterises with intellect.
The brilliance lies in its familiarity. Nothing in Gilead is pure invention. Each rule, slogan, and ceremony has a real-world ancestor. The novel reads like a dystopian report assembled from human history’s receipts. It’s not prophecy; it’s compilation. Atwood builds horror not by imagining the unthinkable, but by daring to document what has already been thought.
If Orwell gave us the fear of surveillance, Atwood gave us the fear of administration — what happens when cruelty is done with paperwork and prayer. The Handmaid’s Tale remains a mirror polished with irony: every reader sees their own century reflected back, just slightly worse, and wonders how close we already are to the red cloak.
The comparison that is not a prophecy
No, the United States is not Gilead. But this is the part worth calm attention. Gilead is not built by a single dramatic decree. It creeps through normal-looking paperwork. A declaration here. A grant freeze there. A polite instruction to a regulator. In a year, the map of access changes. Not a single speech required. The show is the noise. The grant notice is the signal.
Policy inches that matter
- Declarations: Re-joining Geneva signals to friendly governments and domestic agencies how to frame rights. It is soft power with sharp edges.
- Grants and freezes: Title X disruptions do not say abortion on the tin. They hit basic services first, then the rest. Screening drops. Travel rises.
- Agency pressure: telling FDA to consider more limits is not a ban. It is a queue that gets longer and doors that narrow. Meanwhile, a generic approval proves the science does not take orders easily.
- International posture: by cheering the declaration at home and abroad, the administration reframes opposition as consensus. Words move budgets later.
What Gilead gets right as a warning label
- Vocabulary work. Rename cruelty until it sounds normal. Ceremony. Protection. Parental rights. The series and the book teach you to hear the rename.
- Admin as theatre. The scariest shots are not the cattle prods. It is the stamped form and the closed window.
- Geography as policy. In Gilead you travel to suffer. In reality you travel for care. Same map logic, different stakes.
The sketch
Panel 1: A gavel hovers over a pharmacy counter. Caption: Review in progress. Translation: queue first, rights later.
Panel 2: A US clinic map fades to grey patches. Caption: Budget is destiny.
Panel 3: A red cloak in a changing room mirror. Caption: Fiction is a measuring tape.

The rhetoric trap to avoid
Lazy takes shout we are already in Gilead. That flatters policy that is built in inches. The better question is simpler: what changed on paper this week, who signed it, and which postcode lost services. Then count the miles to the nearest clinic. Numbers beat adjectives.
Where the project plans fit
Project 2025 is the wish list. Some items are already visible as memos, freezes, and hints at medication-abortion rules. Sensible people read the plan, then watch for the parts that slip into guidance letters and funding criteria. That is how manifestos become desk instructions.
Counter-signals to watch too
- Court brakes. Injunctions have started to land when agencies overreach on grant conditions and ideological filters. The court calendar matters as much as the Cabinet calendar.
- Bureaucratic gravity. Some approvals are hard to unwind without losing face or breaking law. The generic mifepristone is an example. Once approved, the fight shifts to distribution, stocking, and chilling effect.
- Public reaction. Each high-profile move spikes sales of Atwood’s book and makes the symbol harder to ignore. Culture pushes back with receipts.
What to watch, not the show
- Follow the money lines: Title X awards, Medicaid billing rules, and how states braid them.
- Watch letters of instruction to FDA, HHS, and State, not just podium lines.
- Track international declarations that launder domestic goals as “consensus.”
- Track county-level closures and patient travel miles. Geography is the policy.
- Do not get hypnotised by the theatre. Count what changed, and say what it is out of.
The Hermit take
We are not in Gilead. But paperwork moves a nation by inches.
Count the inches, name the inch-makers, and test every inch against the map.
Keep or toss
Keep the vigilance and the receipts.
Toss the lazy “we’re already there.” Specifics beat slogans.
Sources
MEDIA — BOOK
Wikipedia – The Handmaid’s Tale (novel)
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Handmaid%27s_Tale
Business Insider – post-election surge in Handmaid’s Tale book sales
https://www.businessinsider.com/handmaids-tale-book-sales-rise-melania-after-trump-win-election-2024-11
YouTube – Huei Li professor reference talk (book/series context)
What ICE violence tells you about dating: The best red flag testing mechanism
MEDIA — TV
Hulu press – series synopsis and episodes
https://press.hulu.com/shows/the-handmaids-tale/
Hulu – watch page
https://www.hulu.com/series/the-handmaids-tale-565d8976-9d26-4e63-866c-40f8a137ce5f
IMDb – series page
https://www.imdb.com/title/tt5834204/
Wikipedia – The Handmaid’s Tale (TV)
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Handmaid%27s_Tale_(TV_series)
E! – how the series finale ended after 6 seasons
https://www.eonline.com/news/1417942/how-the-handmaids-tale-finale-ended-after-6-seasons
YouTube – context piece on Roe and Handmaid’s Tale comparisons
POLITICS & POLICY
U.S. State Department – renewed membership in the Geneva Consensus Declaration
https://www.state.gov/united-states-renewed-membership-in-the-geneva-consensus-declaration-on-promoting-womens-health-and-strengthening-the-family
Center for Reproductive Rights – explainer on rejoining Geneva Consensus
https://reproductiverights.org/united-states-announces-intent-to-rejoin-geneva-consensus-declaration/
Congress.gov – concurrent resolution praising the Geneva Consensus Declaration
https://www.congress.gov/bill/119th-congress/senate-concurrent-resolution/4
KFF – Title X grant freeze context
https://www.kff.org/quick-take/trumps-federal-funding-freeze-may-reach-the-title-x-family-planning-program/
KFF – Title X grantees and clinics affected by the 2025 funding freeze
https://www.kff.org/womens-health-policy/title-x-grantees-and-clinics-affected-by-the-trump-administrations-funding-freeze/
Guttmacher – Project 2025 and SRHR
https://www.guttmacher.org/fact-sheet/how-project-2025-seeks-obliterate-srhr
Guttmacher – Title X withholding notices in 2025
https://www.guttmacher.org/2025/04/trump-administrations-withholding-funds-could-impact-30-percent-title-x-patients
Reuters – FDA approves new mifepristone generic amid pressure
https://www.reuters.com/business/healthcare-pharmaceuticals/us-fda-approves-generic-version-abortion-drug-2025-10-02/
Reuters – Planned Title X freeze and defunding efforts
https://www.reuters.com/world/us/trump-administration-aims-freeze-family-planning-grants-wsj-reports-2025-03-25/
Washington Post – Title X freeze hits Planned Parenthood and others
https://www.washingtonpost.com/nation/2025/03/31/planned-parenthood-title-x-funding/
PBS NewsHour – FDA generic approval and backlash
https://www.pbs.org/newshour/health/fda-approves-another-generic-abortion-pill-prompting-conservative-backlash
STAT – 25 years of mifepristone; HHS-FDA review pressure in 2025
https://www.statnews.com/2025/09/28/mifepristone-abortion-pill-fda-approval-25th-anniversary/
ACLU – Project 2025 explained
https://www.aclu.org/project-2025-explained
ACLU – FDA restriction push and Project 2025 context
https://www.aclu.org/press-releases/trump-administration-announces-that-fda-will-consider-imposing-greater-restrictions-on-medication-abortion-nationwide
AP News – court blocks grant conditions imposing ideology on services
https://apnews.com/article/5b6a63295a7bb5b19f8d79af21402030
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