Trump’s war on windmills started in Scotland. Now he’s taking it global
-
Why do people still call them "windmills"? Are they producing flour that I wasn't aware of?
They're turbines.
Windmills can do things other than grind flour. Both terms are correct.
-
Trump’s bitter dislike of renewable energy first erupted publicly 14 years ago in a seemingly trivial spat over wind turbines visible from his Scottish golf course. As Trump returns to Scotland this week, though, he is using the US presidency to squash clean power, with major ramifications for the climate crisis and America’s place in the world.
Although Trump failed in his legal attempt to halt the Scottish wind farm, an enduring scorn towards renewables appears to have been seeded that now has global consequences.
As president, Trump has declared wind and solar projects unwelcome in the US, barring them from federal lands and signing a vast spending bill that demolishes support for a nascent industry that held the promise of revamping the American economy while cutting dangerous planet-heating pollution.
There is a famous book about a mentally deranged man fighting windmills...
-
Windmills can do things other than grind flour. Both terms are correct.
What are energy-producing turbines milling exactly?
-
Why do people still call them "windmills"? Are they producing flour that I wasn't aware of?
They're turbines.
because the windmills of their minds are defective
-
There is a famous book about a mentally deranged man fighting windmills...
I think his name was Don
-
What are energy-producing turbines milling exactly?
Electrons
-
Electrons
Millions and millions of them!
-
Why do people still call them "windmills"? Are they producing flour that I wasn't aware of?
They're turbines.
It's grinding electrons into wires
-
What are energy-producing turbines milling exactly?
Around, of course!
-
Trump’s bitter dislike of renewable energy first erupted publicly 14 years ago in a seemingly trivial spat over wind turbines visible from his Scottish golf course. As Trump returns to Scotland this week, though, he is using the US presidency to squash clean power, with major ramifications for the climate crisis and America’s place in the world.
Although Trump failed in his legal attempt to halt the Scottish wind farm, an enduring scorn towards renewables appears to have been seeded that now has global consequences.
As president, Trump has declared wind and solar projects unwelcome in the US, barring them from federal lands and signing a vast spending bill that demolishes support for a nascent industry that held the promise of revamping the American economy while cutting dangerous planet-heating pollution.
Donald J. Quixote over here battling windmills imagining them as giants.
-
Why do people still call them "windmills"? Are they producing flour that I wasn't aware of?
They're turbines.
They’re milling wind
-
I think his name was Don
Don the con the windmill fighting pedo john.