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Gore home's energy use: 20 times average
WorldNetDaily ^ | 2/26/07 | WorldNetDaily

Posted on 02/26/2007 4:38:04 PM PST by wagglebee

 


Al Gore
Al Gore deserves an Oscar for hypocrisy to go along with the two Academy Awards his movie won last night, contends a think tank from his home state Tennessee.

The former vice president's mansion in the posh Belle Meade area of Nashville consumes more electricity every month than the average American household uses in an entire year, says the Tennessee Center for Policy Research, citing data from the Nashville Electric Service.

Gore's "An Inconvenient Truth, a 95-minute film warning of a coming cataclysm due to man-made "global warming," won the award for best documentary feature and best song.

"My fellow Americans, people all over the world, we need to solve the climate crisis," Gore said after taking the stage. "It's not a political issue, it's a moral issue. We have everything we need to get started, with the possible exception of the will to act. That's a renewable resource. Let's renew it."

Standing with Gore on the stage last night, actor Leonardo DiCaprio said, to applause, "The American film industry has always taken its obligations to society very seriously and it's now stepping up once again. Tonight, we're proud to announce that for the first time in the history of the Oscars, this show has officially gone green.

Gore then followed with, "Which means that environmentally intelligent practices have been integrated fully into every aspect of the planning and production of these Academy Awards. And you know what: It is not as hard as you might think. We have a long way to go. But all of us can do something in our own lives to make a difference."

But according to the Tennessee think tank, while the average American household consumed 10,656 kilowatt-hours last year, Gore devoured nearly 221,000 – more than 20 times the national average.

Tennessee Center for Policy Research President Drew Johnson said that "as the spokesman of choice for the global warming movement, Al Gore has to be willing to walk to walk, not just talk the talk, when it comes to home energy use."

Last August alone, according to Johnson' group, Gore burned through 22,619 kilowatt-hours of electricity, more than twice the amount in one month that an average American family uses in an entire year.

Gore's average monthly electric bill, the think tank says, is $1,359.

Since the release of Gore's film, the former vice president and presidential candidate's energy consumption has increased from an average of 16,200 kilowatt-hours per month in 2005, to 18,400 per month in 2006.

The Tennessee group also points out natural gas bills for Gore's mansion and guest house averaged $1,080 per month last year.

Gore paid a total of nearly $30,000 in combined electricity and natural gas bills for his Nashville estate in 2006.

Responding to critics, Gore has described the lifestyle he and his wife Tipper live as "carbon neutral," meaning he tries to offset any plane flight or car trip by "purchasing verifiable reductions in CO2 elsewhere."



TOPICS: Culture/Society; News/Current Events; US: Tennessee
KEYWORDS: algore; carboncredits; carboncretins; globalwarming; gorebullwarming; hypocrite; kilowatthours; manbearpig
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To: Peach
his skin does have that shiny look

I think it's because it is stretched so tight. Someday his face is going to pop open and the new algore will come out. Kind of like a cicada or a snake.

61 posted on 02/26/2007 5:34:26 PM PST by Right Wing Assault ("..this administration is planning a 'Right Wing Assault' on values and ideals.." - John Kerry)
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To: wagglebee

He has to use all that energy for his Manbearpig tracking devices, DUH!

It's very tough work finding Manbearpig, but Algore is bent on saving the world from the threat of Manbearpig.


62 posted on 02/26/2007 5:34:32 PM PST by RatsDawg
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To: Calpernia
OMG, he tweezes his eyebrows!

Not to mention he wears more eye-s*it than Shepard Smith....Makeup just doesn't help some folks.

63 posted on 02/26/2007 5:34:41 PM PST by ErnBatavia (Forward this to your 10 very best friends....)
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To: Jaysun

I could care less how much electricity, gas, or water a person is consuming, AS LONG AS THEY AREN'T TELLING THE REST OF US HOW MUCH WE SHOULD USE.


64 posted on 02/26/2007 5:35:26 PM PST by wagglebee ("We are ready for the greatest achievements in the history of freedom." -- President Bush, 1/20/05)
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To: wagglebee
In his defense, most of the extra usage is from his basement lab where he invents internets and stuff:


65 posted on 02/26/2007 5:36:31 PM PST by P.O.E.
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To: Peach

Yes, that was what I was referencing :)


66 posted on 02/26/2007 5:38:17 PM PST by Calpernia (Breederville.com)
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To: o_zarkman44

I think pot growers have a better understanding of basic economics than Al. The Gores just have to run the AC all the time due to the hot air proceeding from his mouth.


67 posted on 02/26/2007 5:44:33 PM PST by cdcdawg
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To: CindyDawg

Absolutely, but telling the peons that they are causing global warming when he is living that lifestyle is deplorable in my opinion.


68 posted on 02/26/2007 5:45:04 PM PST by mel
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To: wagglebee
I thought albore lived in a cabin in woods without electricity
69 posted on 02/26/2007 5:46:16 PM PST by razorback-bert (Posted by Time's Man of the Year)
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To: wagglebee

We used 791 kilowatts in December in NW Montana! We have gas central heat, but upstairs it's electric heat.

The hypocrisy of the Al Gores and Arnold Schwartzeneggers just astounds me!


70 posted on 02/26/2007 5:54:22 PM PST by claudiustg
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To: wagglebee
Al Gore deserves an Oscar for hypocrisy

That needs to be said over and over again......

71 posted on 02/26/2007 6:01:45 PM PST by ErieGeno
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To: wagglebee

Modern 'environmentalism' is yet another chapter in the eternal struggle between those that are for live-and-let-live and those that know-it-better-for-everyone. Modern 'liberals' should be reminded that it was mostly 'dead white men' and Christians who were the first to promote the inherent value of the individual and the right of every man to rule himself. Western Civilization, and especially America, is an aberration in the world when it comes to the recognition of individual autonomy.


72 posted on 02/26/2007 6:03:09 PM PST by Aikonaa
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To: wagglebee
The rules only pertain to "the little people." Just look at the old communist Russia.

Some pigs are more equal than others.

73 posted on 02/26/2007 6:04:04 PM PST by bannie
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To: razorback-bert

Use Google Earth to obtain the satelite image of the Gore residence. It ain't no cabin in the woods.

His address is easily obtainable through resources like this: http://www.fundrace.org/neighbors.php?search=1&type=loc&addr=312+Lynnwood+Blvd&zip=37205


74 posted on 02/26/2007 6:07:19 PM PST by RXSalesman
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To: bannie

Speaking of communists, I was just reading a book on Mao and it seems that he was pretty explicit with his view that the annointed communist elite should have special privileges over regular folks. After all, they are tirelessly working for the best of all mankind.


75 posted on 02/26/2007 6:09:21 PM PST by Aikonaa
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To: Aikonaa
See Animal Farm

The elite pigs deserve the milk because they're smarter, and their brains have to work harder.

76 posted on 02/26/2007 6:12:50 PM PST by bannie
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To: RC2
"I thought he made his first million from inventing the internet?????"

If he's running the entire internet system in his basement I'd say that the amount of electricity he's using is well worth it.
77 posted on 02/26/2007 6:13:03 PM PST by toomanylaws
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To: wagglebee

THE WILDERNESS CAMPAIGN
Al Gore lives on a street in Nashville.
by DAVID REMNICK
Issue of 2004-09-13
Posted 2004-09-06

"Hey, Dwayne? . . . Dwayne?” “Yes, Mr. Vice-President?”

“Could I have some more coffee?”

“Yes, Mr. Vice-President. Coming . . .”

“Thanks, Dwayne.”

It was ten in the morning in Nashville, a quiet weekday, with most of the neighbors off to work, and Albert Gore, Jr., sat at the head of his dining-room table eating breakfast. His plate was crowded with scrambled eggs, bacon, toast. His pond-size mug had, in a flash, been refilled by Dwayne Kemp, his cook, a skilled and graceful man who had been employed by the Gores when, as his boss often puts it, “we were still working in the White House.” Freshly showered and shaved, Gore was wearing a midnight-blue shirt and gray wool trousers. In the months after losing the battle for Florida’s electoral votes and conceding the Presidency to George W. Bush, on December 13, 2000, Gore seemed to let himself go, dropping out of sight, travelling around Spain, Italy, and Greece for six weeks with his wife, Tipper. He wore dark glasses and a baseball cap tugged down low. He grew a mountain-man beard and gained weight. When he began appearing in public again, mainly in classrooms, he took to introducing himself by saying, “Hi, I’m Al Gore. I used to be the next President of the United States.” People looked at this rather bulky and hirsute man—a politician who had only recently won 50,999,897 votes for the Presidency, more than any Democrat in history, more than any candidate in history except Ronald Reagan in 1984, and more than half a million more votes than the man who assumed the office—and did not know quite what to feel or how to behave, and so they coöperated in his elaborate self-deprecations. They laughed at his jokes, as if to help him erase what everyone understood to be a disappointment of historic proportions—“the heartbreak of a lifetime,” as Karenna, the eldest of his four children, put it.

“You know the old saying,” Gore told one audience after another. “You win some, you lose some—and then there’s that little-known third category.”

Gore has since dispensed with the beard but not the weight. He is still thick around the middle. He eats quickly and thoroughly, and with a determined relish, precisely like a man who no longer has to care that he might look heavy on “Larry King Live.” “You want some eggs?” he asked. “Dwayne’s the best.”

This has been the first election season in a generation in which Al Gore has not pursued national office. He ran for President in 1988, when he was thirty-nine; for Vice-President, on Bill Clinton’s ticket, in 1992 and 1996; and then again for President in 2000. Having decided that a rematch against Bush would be too divisive (or, perhaps, too difficult), Gore has made an effort not to brood on the sidelines. Instead, he used words like “liberated” and “free” with a determined conviction to describe his inner condition. He was free of the burden, free of the pressure, free of the camera’s eye. At home in Nashville, the phone barely rang. There were no advance people at the door, no aides at his shoulder. He could say what he wanted and it hardly made a ripple in the media. If he felt like calling George Bush a “moral coward,” if he felt like comparing Guantánamo and Abu Ghraib to islands in an “American gulag” or the President’s media operatives to “digital Brown Shirts,” well, he just went ahead and did it. No worries, no hesitation. True, at noon at the Belcourt Theatre, he was to deliver a speech to a group called the Music Row Democrats, but the only cameras were likely to be local. He jokingly outlined the speech on a small notepad with just two words: “war” and “economy.”

When Al and Tipper Gore had recovered from the initial shock of the 2000 election, they spent $2.3 million on the house they live in now: a hundred-year-old Colonial on Lynwood Boulevard, in the Belle Meade section of Nashville. They still own a place in Arlington, Virginia—a house that was built by Tipper’s grandfather—and a ninety-acre cattle farm in the Gore family seat of Carthage, Tennessee; but Arlington was perilously close to Washington, and Carthage was too remote for a full-time residence, especially for Tipper. Belle Meade, which resembles Buckhead, in Atlanta, or Mountain Brook, near Birmingham, is a prosperous redoubt for businessmen and country-music stars; it encompasses a neighborhood of broad, sloping lawns, and houses with magnolia trees and “estate” driveways up front and glassy modern additions and swimming pools out back. Chet Atkins used to be a neighbor; Leon Russell still is. Some of the features of the house, which the couple expanded with the help of an architect, are distinctly Gore-ish: Tipper’s full drum set, in the living room (complete with congas); Al’s grip-and-grin photographs with the Clintons and world leaders, along the walls. There are fewer books and more televisions than you might expect. When the architect was designing the rear addition to the house, Gore asked him to curve the walls inward in two places in order to save several trees. “The trees weren’t anything special, nothing rare or anything,” he said. “I just couldn’t bear to bring ’em down.” In the back yard, around the patio and the extra-long pool, where Al and Tipper do laps, Gore also installed an anti-bug system that sprays a fine mist of ground chrysanthemums from various discreet sources: a tree trunk, a patio wall. “The mosquitoes just hate it,” he said. Other features of the house are less environmentally correct. A 2004 black Cadillac, which Gore drives, was parked in the driveway. A ’65 Mustang—a Valentine’s Day gift from Al to Tipper—was parked in the garage.

Gore finished his eggs. He walked to a covered patio on the side of the house and settled into a soft chair. Dwayne brought his coffee cup and refilled it.

(snip)

http://www.newyorker.com/fact/content/articles/040913fa_fact?040913fa_fact


78 posted on 02/26/2007 6:15:51 PM PST by maggief
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To: Calpernia

"OMG, he tweezes his eyebrows!"

I'm sure his stylist does that for him. Probably flies the lad in from Europe on such special occasions on a charter jet.


79 posted on 02/26/2007 6:23:56 PM PST by driftdiver
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To: wagglebee

What was going on in the Gore home last August that would cause energy consumption 20 times the average?


80 posted on 02/26/2007 6:28:39 PM PST by Don'tMessWithTexas
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