Tuesday, December 31, 2019

"Trump says he doesn't understand wind then proved it."

Observers mystified by Trump 'moronic' and 'unhinged' diatribe against wind power
Image result for trump and windmillsIn a speech to the right-wing Turning Points USA conference in Florida last week, Donald Trump launched into an incoherent diatribe against wind power in which he said in the same breath that he "never understood wind" and has studied windmills "better than anybody," pointed out for no apparent reason that the earth is "tiny" compared to the rest of the universe, and claimed there are "bird graveyards" under wind turbines.

"I never understood wind. You know, I know windmills very much," Trump told the audience of mostly high school and college students. "It's very expensive. They're made in China and Germany mostly—very few made here, almost none. But they're manufactured tremendous, if you're into this, tremendous fumes, gases are spewing into the atmosphere."

"You know we have a world, right?" Trump added. "So the world is tiny compared to the universe. So tremendous, tremendous amount of fumes and everything. You talk about the carbon footprint. Fumes are spewing into the air, right? Spewing. Whether its in China, Germany, its going into the air. Our air, their air, everything. Right?"



Image result for trump and windmills in scotland
Trump's anti-wind mania goes back over 10 years when he lost a fight to
stop this 11-turbine off-shore wind farm visible from his country club
in Scotland. Trump hates to lose. The Scottish high court has ruled that
Trump owes Scotland millions for their legal costs.
Trump went on to rant about the threat wind turbines pose to birds, without noting that fossil fuel plants are far more deadly.


"They're noisy. They kill the birds," Trump said. "You want to see a bird graveyard? You just go. Take a look. A bird graveyard. Go under a windmill someday. You'll see more birds than you've ever seen ever in your life."

Activist Matt Ortega tweeted in response to the president's speech that "Trump says he doesn't understand wind then proved it."

Trump's remarks were so bizarre that environmentalists and other observers had a difficult time critiquing them, aside from noting that they were completely "unhinged." 

Vox's David Roberts wrote that while was no decipherable argument in Trump's speech, that won't stop mainstream media outlets from presenting Trump's remarks as a "coherent point about wind power."

Earther's Matt Novak wrote Monday that Trump's speech would "be almost funny if it wasn't coming from the most powerful person in the world—a man who's setting energy policy while climate change makes the world less inhabitable for all of us."

"All in all, the speech was suitably unhinged for a president who has mostly lost touch with reality," Novak added. "But Trump has learned that he can say whatever he wants now and his supporters will stick with him."