About This Site


  • XML
    Google Reader or Homepage
    Add to My Yahoo!
    Subscribe with Bloglines
    Subscribe in NewsGator Online

    Add to My AOL
    Add to Technorati Favorites!

Daily Dose

  • Word of the Day

    Article of the Day

    This Day in History

    Today's Birthday

    Quotation of the Day

    Heather's Hangman

Blogroll

Please Support

  • Visit NCBlogs

    Brand Dems

Email/Comment Policy

  • All e-mail received by The Seventh Sense is considered intended for publication. Please don't send attachments.

    Comments that are abusive, offensive, contain profane material or violate the terms of service for this blog's host provider will be removed and the author(s) banned from future comments.

    URL's within the body of the comment must be in html format or they will be deleted as they skew the site.

Legal Stuff

  • Creative Commons License


    This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 2.5 License.

    Nothing on this site should be construed as legal advice. The Seventh Sense don't give no legal advice.

    The Seventh Sense is not responsible for and often disagrees with material posted in the comments section. Read at your own risk.

    Or at least develop a sense of humor.
Powered by TypePad

« January 2007 | Main | March 2007 »

Wednesday, February 28, 2007

Harry Potter - Nude!

Nice to see actors buck the sterotypes that made them famous:

On stage in London's West End and stripped of his cinematic magic (and for a while his clothes), Daniel Radcliffe of “Harry Potter” fame proves he’s no-one trick pony. Last night’s much-anticipated revival of Peter Shaffer’s “Equus” showed off a darker, more mature Radcliffe. Gone was the bespectacled schoolboy wizard, replaced by Radcliffe’s portrayal of a disturbed 17-year-old, Alan Strang, who’s committed to a psychiatric hospital for unexplainably blinding six horses with a metal pick. As an estranged and volatile loner, Radcliffe, 17 in real life, deftly reflects the raw passion and erotic energy of Shaffer’s script.

The critics were impressed.

Right-Wing Noise Machine Still Attacking Gore

Anonymous Liberal:

The right-wing noise machine really is a remarkable thing to behold. Al Gore wins an Oscar, gets some well-deserved recognition for his efforts, and within hours the Republican noise machine is already in full smear mode, trying to undercut Gore's message by attacking him personally.

It began this morning when a group that no one has ever heard of--the Tennessee Center for Policy Research--issued a press release claiming that Al Gore's utility bills reveal that his house in Nashville uses 20 times more energy than the average American household. This, according to the group, makes Al Gore an enormous hypocrite.

***

At the heart of all this nonsense is the bizarre notion that somehow the wisdom and importance of Gore's message about global climate change would be called into question if it could be shown that Gore doesn't always practice what he preaches. Putting aside the fact that the case against Gore is incredibly weak, why does any of this matter? If Gore were to leave his backdoor open all winter, thereby wasting thousands of kilowatts of energy, would that somehow make his slide show less convincing? If it were demonstrated that Gore's house is not as energy efficient as it could be, would that somehow render his tireless efforts to bring attention to this important issue less meaningful? Of course not. This entire line of attack is just a meaningless sideshow, an effort to distract the American people from the substance of the issue itself.

This Shouldn't Happen In The Most Advanced Country On Earth

We really need to overhaul health care big time:

Twelve-year-old Deamonte Driver died of a toothache Sunday.

A routine, $80 tooth extraction might have saved him.

If his mother had been insured.

If his family had not lost its Medicaid.

If Medicaid dentists weren't so hard to find.

If his mother hadn't been focused on getting a dentist for his brother, who had six rotted teeth.

By the time Deamonte's own aching tooth got any attention, the bacteria from the abscess had spread to his brain, doctors said. After two operations and more than six weeks of hospital care, the Prince George's County boy died.

Deamonte's death and the ultimate cost of his care, which could total more than $250,000, underscore an often-overlooked concern in the debate over universal health coverage: dental care.

Some poor children have no dental coverage at all....

Read the whole thing.

A Reminder

Just a reminder: Daylight Saving Time lasts longer this year. Is your computer ready for that?

Troops Unprepared

How can people who "support the troops" allow this to happen?

Rushed by President Bush's decision to reinforce Baghdad with thousands more U.S. troops, two Army combat brigades are skipping their usual session at the Army's premier training range in California and instead are making final preparations at their home bases.

Some in Congress and others outside the Army are beginning to question the switch, which is not widely known. They wonder whether it means the Army is cutting corners in preparing soldiers for combat, since they are forgoing training in a desert setting that was designed specially to prepare them for the challenges of Iraq.

Tuesday, February 27, 2007

Light Blogging/Pillow Fight NYC 2007

There will be light blogging for the next several days due to the following:

(1) I may have jury duty tomorrow.  (I'll find out when I call the special number after 5:00 p.m. today) [POST 5 P.M. UPDATE:  Yay!!  No jury duty!!!]

(2) I'll be in NYC for a long weekend.  Gonna see some shows ["Wicked", "Spring Awakening", Jack Goes Boating" (with Phillip Seymour Hoffman), and "Curtains" (a new musical with David Hyde Pierce)]

I won't be participating in any pillow fights, like the one they had in Union Square this past weekend.

Supreme Court Gives Gore's Oscar To Bush

Heh:

In a stunning reversal for the former vice president, the Supreme Court ordered that Al Gore’s Academy Award be given to President Bush.

Just days after former Vice President Al Gore received an Academy Award for his global- warming documentary, “An Inconvenient Truth,” the Supreme Court handed Gore a stunning reversal, stripping him of his Oscar and awarding it to President George W. Bush instead.

For Gore, who basked in the adulation of his Hollywood audience Sunday night, the high court’s decision to give his Oscar to President Bush was a cruel twist of fate, to say the least. But in a 5-4 decision handed down Tuesday morning, the justices made it clear that they had taken the unprecedented step of stripping Gore of his Oscar because President Bush deserved it more.

“It is true that Al Gore has done a lot of talking about global warming,” wrote Justice Antonin Scalia, writing for the majority. “But President Bush has actually helped create global warming.”

If Jesus Talked Like Truman Capote

UPDATE:  More Jesus fun -- Virgin Mary appears on a cookie sheet.

Quote Of The Day

Laura Bush on Larry King Live:

And many parts of Iraq are stable now. But, of course, what we see on television is the one bombing a day that discourages everybody.

One bombing a day?  C'mon, Laura.

Here's a list of incidents Iraq over the past week.  By my count, there are 34 involving bombs.  That's five a day.

The Gore Smear

The rightwing noise machine has set its sites on Al Gore.

A group as sprung up overnight, calling itself the Tennessee Center for Policy Research (it is, despite its official sounding name, a rightwing organization founded by a member of the conservative thinktank, American Enterprise Institute).  It issued a press release, picked up by Drudge Report, rightwing blogs, and Fox News, claiming that Al Gore's utility bills for his house in Nashville show that he uses 20 times more energy than the average American household. This, according to the group, makes Al Gore an enormous hypocrite.

I'll let Anonymous Liberal do the debunking:

This is a textbook example of the mindless swarming behavior that is so typical among right-wing partisan flacks. First, everyone on the right--from top to bottom--simply assumed that the content of this press release, which was put out by an organization none of them had ever heard of before, was factually accurate. Actually, that probably gives them too much credit. It's not that they assumed it was accurate, it's that they didn't care. The press release was chalked full of truthiness, and that was good enough.

The press release claimed that Al Gore's home in Nashville consumed 221,000 kilowatt hours (kWh) of electricity last year compared to a national average of 10,656 kWh per household. I have no idea whether the number cited for Gore's house is correct, but let's assume it is. The 10,656 number comes from data published by the Department of Energy. But it's an average of all households nationwide (including apartment units and mobile homes) and across all climate regions. As it turns out, the region in which Gore lives--the East South Central--has the highest per household energy usage of any climate region in the country, a good 50% higher than the national average quoted in the press release (I assume this is due to the combination of cold winters and hot, muggy summers). So that's misleading in and of itself.

Moreover, Gore lives in a large home (10,000 sq. ft.). If you look at the data, it's clear that Gore's energy usage per square foot (even assuming the 221,000 kWh number is accurate) is well within the average range for his climate region. So all this accusation boils down to is a claim that it is somehow "hypocritical" for Al Gore to live in a large house.

That's awfully weak. Gore's a former Senator and Vice President of the United States. Does he have to move into a studio apartment before he has the right to talk about climate change?

And more importantly, as Think Progress reports, even this watered-down hypocrisy charge entirely misses the point. What Al Gore wants people to do is reduce the carbon footprint of their residence as much as possible and then purchase carbon offsets to reduce the remaining footprint to zero. Gore has installed solar panels in his home, he uses fluorescent light bulbs and other energy saving technology, and he purchases his energy from Green Power Switch, a provider which utilizes solar and wind power. He then purchases carbon offsets to reduce his remaining carbon footprint to zero.

Could Gore use less overall energy if he and Tipper moved into a one-bedroom apartment? Of course. But he's not asking people to move into smaller homes. He's asking them to reduce their carbon footprints, which is exactly what he has done. He practices what he preaches.

Still, these sort of facts about Al Gore aren't likely to deter the self-congratulatory right, now convinced they have "caught" Gore in an act of hypocrisy.  This is how they operate.

Live Webcams

  • Slideshow image


Hurricane Tracker


Facebook

2008 Election

Fact File

Headline News

Blogosphere

Opinions

Arts & Stage News

Red Sox News

McSweeney's Lists