Sanders and Platner Graham Platner, running for the U.S. Senate against Susan Collins in Maine, has lost considerable support among establishment Democrats in the face of allegations that were known long before they disembarked from the Platner bandwagon. On July 7 Politico reported, “ More than half of the Senate Democratic caucus has called for Graham Platner to drop out of the Maine Senate race, less than 24 hours after POLITICO reported that a woman the oysterman once dated had accused him of sexual assault… Most Democrats previously stuck by Platner even as his beleaguered campaign battled scandal after scandal in recent months. By Tuesday, the tide had turned firmly against Platner, with 38 of the Senate’s 47 Democratic senators calling for him to drop out as of early Tuesday afternoon.” What was the straw the broke the donkey’s back? It was not the “Nazi” tattoo Platner proudly sported throughout his questionable assignations. Correcting som...
The Homeric Odyssey, the world’s most justly celebrated homecoming story, is a fable about the salvation of more than Odysseus. The recent film The Odyssey may save Hollywood as well. People, all of whom are story-swapping creatures, still yearn for captivating narratives, and Hollywood has been drifting away from captivating narratives for decades, part of the reason it has lost a good portion of its audience. Casablanca , staring Humphry Bogart and Ingrid Bergman, was captivating; the cartoonish Toy Story, the nation’s first entirely computer-animated feature film, was merely entertaining and novel. Literary scholars are still disputing whether The Odyssey attributed to Homer, a blind poet, was written by a single hand or whether it was a product of multiple narratives, much like the books of the Bible. And, of course, scientifically minded historians hope to clear up any confusion through a discovery of historical facts. A movie soon to be available, The Odyssey , i...