{groan} -- or -- Dystopians v. Utopians
I shouldn't be linking to this site, as I don't wish to promote such a banal and intellectually vacuous work, but I can't help sharing in witnessing the trainwreck that is this yarn:
As for "God's United States", give me a break. At least Canadian leftist feminist writer Margaret Atwood told an interesting story when she penned "The Handmaid's Tale". That it was required reading my freshman year (1987) at George Mason University is so very typical - and asinine, as is undoubtedly this tale.
Then again, I'll take a dystopian yarn to a utopian one any day. It's the utopians who are truly deluded. At least the dystopians admit some inherent fallibility / imperfectibility in man.
Picture a totalitarian United States just ten years from now: With no end in sight to the War on Terror, a fourth-term President George Blush rules without restraint. The Constitution has been replaced with a “Patriotic Citizen’s Bill of Rights and Responsibilities” and America has been renamed “God’s United States.” This terrifying political thriller conjures up a vision of the future that lays bare the most incendiary political issues of our day.C'mon. I am not the President's biggest fan, but "a fourth-term President George Bush"? I seem to recall the last one of those we had was a Democrat... but I digress.
As for "God's United States", give me a break. At least Canadian leftist feminist writer Margaret Atwood told an interesting story when she penned "The Handmaid's Tale". That it was required reading my freshman year (1987) at George Mason University is so very typical - and asinine, as is undoubtedly this tale.
Then again, I'll take a dystopian yarn to a utopian one any day. It's the utopians who are truly deluded. At least the dystopians admit some inherent fallibility / imperfectibility in man.








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