‘I never
understood wind’: Trump goes on bizarre tirade against wind turbines
President’s
nonsensical rambling remarks about ‘windmills’ in segment from weekend speech
raised eyebrows
Richard
Luscombe in Miami
@richlusc
Mon 23 Dec
2019 18.27 GMTFirst published on Mon 23 Dec 2019 16.24 GMT
He says he
knows more about Isis than his generals, and claims to understand politicians
“better than anybody”. Now there is another subject in which Donald Trump’s
expert knowledge surpasses that of everybody else: wind turbines, though he
calls them windmills.
“I’ve
studied it better than anybody I know,” the president asserted in a bizarre
segment from a weekend speech to young conservatives in West Palm Beach,
Florida, close to his winter retreat at Mar-a-Lago where he is spending the
holidays.
“I never
understood wind. You know, I know windmills very much. They’re noisy. They kill
the birds. You want to see a bird graveyard? Go under a windmill someday.
You’ll see more birds than you’ve ever seen in your life.”
The Hill
✔
@thehill
President
Trump: "I never understood wind, you know I know windmills very much. I've
studied it better than anybody."
Trump
ripped into a range of familiar targets in a speech lasting more than one hour
at the Turning Point USA student action summit, from the Democrats and House
speaker Nancy Pelosi, to his recent impeachment and the so-called Never Trumpers
in the Republican party who he said were “the dumbest human beings on earth”.
But it was
his rambling and often nonsensical remarks about wind turbines, during a
diatribe against the Green New Deal and renewable energy resources, that raised
eyebrows.
“They’re made in China and Germany mostly,”
Trump said of wind turbines, of which there are more than 57,000 across the US,
according to the American Wind Energy Association. “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? 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 it’s in China, Germany, it’s going into the air. It’s our air, their
air, everything, right?”
It was
unclear what exactly Trump meant, or how Trump equated wind turbines converting
clean air into energy to toxic fumes fouling the atmosphere. But he did share
his thoughts on their appearance.
“You see
all those [windmills]. They’re all different shades of color,” he said.
“They’re like sort of white, but one is like an orange-white. It’s my favorite
color, orange.”
The president’s
“war on wind” is not new: earlier this year he was ridiculed for his claims
that wind turbines destroyed property values and caused cancer from their
noise.
He is
accused of having begun his tirades against wind turbines after wind farm
developments were proposed near the golf course he owns in Scotland.
There is
some evidence that wind turbines have a negative impact on wildlife: a 2013
study by the Wildlife Society estimated widespread fatalities in California,
including close to a million bats and more than half a million birds, including
83,000 raptors such as bald and golden eagles.
The
president’s final words on the subject, before hailing himself an “an environmentalist”
presiding over an environment “in very good shape”, concerned the long-term
aesthetics of wind turbines.
“You know
what they don’t tell you about windmills? After 10 years they look like hell.
They start to get tired, old,” he said, lamenting that owners of ageing
windmills not replacing them without government subsidies was “a really
terrible thing”.
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