It seems like things are continually becoming worse in Jimmy's world. A quote that stuck out to me—and proves this—is,
"He'd watch the news: more plagues, more famines, more floods, more insect or microbe or small-mammal outbreaks, more droughts... There were the usual political assassinations out there in the pleebs, the usual strange accidents, the unexplained disappearances. Or there were sex scandals: sex scandals always got the newscasters excited," (Atwood 307).
Yes, all of these things seem horrible, but what really stuck out to me is the way that Jimmy does not seem bothered by any of it. It seems like they happen so often that it does not effect anyone anymore. Especially when he says, "...the usual political assassinations," because it makes it sound like it is not breaking news, just a typical news story.
I am also kind of confused about what the 'pleeblands' are. It seems like it is the area that is not the compounds, but I do not know why it is referred to as the pleeblands. The pleeblands are viewed as quite negative, to the people in the compounds at least. They are said to be dangerous and you need to be tough to survive in them.
Though pleebland is not a real word, it means poor, crime-infested neighborhoods. Or where ordinary people live. I guess we are kind of living in a pleebland now. Maybe that is why they built the compounds; they tried to make this perfect world.
Their version of 'perfect' turned to chaos because of everyone's imperfect actions, such as creating new diseases and doing everything just for profit. I think one of the main focuses of the novel is how there can never be a perfect world. There will always be fault and greed and suffering.