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Friday, September 07, 2007
Chuck Colson :: Townhall.com Columnist
Gone with the Wind Farm
by Chuck Colson
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Who won Tuesday's presidential debate?


It is good to be back to work this week, refreshed from our summer breaks. Patty and I took our time in August to visit our son and daughter-in-law and their two children at their beach cottage on the lovely island of Martha’s Vineyard, Massachusetts—yes, that Martha’s Vineyard, made famous by the Kennedys, the Clintons, and scores of other politicians and media figures who take refuge on this lovely wooded island, covered with charming cedar-shingled cottages, rocky wind-swept coastlines, and surrounded by yachts.

During the high season this summer, the island’s wealthy gentry held a succession of elegant fundraisers for the likes of Hillary Clinton, John Edwards, and—with a bipartisan touch—Mitt Romney. It is a watering hole for the likes of Walter Cronkite, Mike Wallace, Carly Simon, all kinds of movie stars. John Kerry is nearby in Nantucket, and the Kennedys—including environmentalist Robert Kennedy, Jr.—look over from Cape Cod.

Clearly, Cape Cod and the islands are the places to go if you want to watch celebrities. It is also the place to be if you want to see liberal hypocrisy in action. Liberal hypocrisy, you ask?

Most liberal politicians ardently support proposals intended to save the environment. They fly around the country in private jets, urging Americans to give up their SUVs, drive hybrid cars, and leave a smaller carbon footprint. When it comes to reducing their own carbon footprints—well, that’s another story.

For years, the wealthy elite of Martha’s Vineyard and Cape Cod have lobbied hard against a proposed wind farm in Nantucket Sound. The proposed complex of 130 wind turbines, 400 feet high, would sit eight miles out in the Sound and be confined to 24 square miles. On a clear day, they would barely be visible from the island’s waterfront homes.

The wind farm would generate enough energy to take care of most of the electrical needs of Cape Cod, Martha’s Vineyard, and Nantucket. And by replacing oil, it would greatly reduce greenhouse gas emissions. Environmental groups like Greenpeace love the wind farm proposal.

But apparently, to paraphrase the late Leona Helmsley, only little people should sacrifice to save the environment. As for the rich and privileged—why, what’s the point of spending the summer in an ocean-front home if there is a chance they might glimpse a wind turbine in the distance? What a thing to ask! Continued...

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About The Author
Chuck Colson was the Chief Counsel for Richard Nixon and served time in prison for Watergate-related charges. In 1976, Colson founded Prison Fellowship Ministries, which, in collaboration with churches of all confessions and denominations, has become the world's largest outreach to prisoners, ex-prisoners, crime victims, and their families.
 
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Subject: Pinto Man
Thats the problem. The rich liberals swells don't want to sit and think. Or stand and think. Or think. They might realize how silly they are....

windmills of my mind
I'm sure Chuck didn't refer to his Christianity in order to offend anybody; it's just a fact of his life (as mine; be offended if you must). And in point of fact, Christians are called to the highest of standards, certainly higher than the prevailing blowhards of coastal New England.

My solitary bone to pick with Chuck is his apparent support for windmills. My cousin works for the power company in Oklahoma (a notoriously windblown state), and he has lost friends to the darn things; apparently their height makes them ideal lightning rods. Plus, trying to supply a good sized power grid by way of wind generators is akin to trying to boil a ten gallon kettle of water with birthday candles; small sources, however many times repeated, simply do not supply the kind of power needed for anything but a comparatively small scale.

Oh... but we've been told global manmade warming is a catastrophe of the greatest scale... so that must mean that wind power is just so much ... oh my.

Apologies to Zimmy, but in this case, "the answer, my friend, is" most definitely NOT "blowing in the wind." (Unless the wind is blowing by a USA designed nuke plant, that is!)
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