Ah The Handmaid's Tale and its brave critique of totalitarianism...
... kind of like the true story of Maryam Rostampour and Marziyeh Amirizadeh, those two Iranian women whose government tortured and threatened them with execution for professing their Christian beliefs. Because, you see, Iran was really, really afraid of those Christians Rostampour and Amirizadeh leading a coup d'état against the government and establishing their own Persian Republic of Gilead.
Yup, good thing the Ayatollah stopped that right-wing Christian dystopia from being established over there.
6 comments
n/a SnapshillBot 2017-04-14
Neat.
Snapshots:
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n/a Bureaucrat-72 2017-04-14
You would think users on a subreddit like /r/books would have better grammar.
n/a CucksLoveTrump 2017-04-14
Grammer on proper speelling is the tool of the Jew
n/a Bureaucrat-72 2017-04-14
Who do you think publishes books?
n/a CucksLoveTrump 2017-04-14
The Jews duh
n/a SkekEkt 2017-04-14
Ah The Handmaid's Tale and its brave critique of totalitarianism...
... kind of like the true story of Maryam Rostampour and Marziyeh Amirizadeh, those two Iranian women whose government tortured and threatened them with execution for professing their Christian beliefs. Because, you see, Iran was really, really afraid of those Christians Rostampour and Amirizadeh leading a coup d'état against the government and establishing their own Persian Republic of Gilead.
Yup, good thing the Ayatollah stopped that right-wing Christian dystopia from being established over there.