Indeed, Ms. Atwood says The Handmaid's Tale drew on historical and (then) contemporary events -- which is one of the reasons she, somewhat sniffily, eschews being lumped in with "Science Fiction." It's also one of the reasons I, somewhat sniffily, have shelved that book with my other science fiction books: all SF is, in one way or another, linked to current and past events, and to the writer's perception of them.
You can read The Handmaid's Tale as a warning -- just as you can Le Guin's The Dispossessed; and they both warn about the harm caused by trying to hammer everyone into the same mold and the endless cruelties we inflict on one another when we don't stop to think and to care.
The lesson is the same: Live however you choose -- but don't force the weird people across the road or the dull people next door to live the way you do. Treat other people politely; you're not obliged to respect their choices but you don't get to be a jerk about it, nor do they about your choices.
Otherwise, you're locked into an endless cycle of mutual retribution that will harm innocents every time the wheel turns. "Oh," you may complain, "But look how it enrages those who disagree with me." And with that, you have put yourself next to the Carthaginians as Roman historians described them, shoveling babies into the fire to ensure prosperity and victory.
It's not worth so horrific a price. It never is.
Update
4 weeks ago
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