Posted by
Woodenblog on Monday, November 26, 2007 6:36:55 PM
This past year has been much ballyhooed, because of the wind tower dilemma in Hamlin, NY. Should we, or shouldn't we?
I have found it quite telling that those most in favor appear to be those who will benefit from the towers, while those most opposed are those whose concerns belie a concerted hatred of their neighbors landholding, and ability to make money that otherwise would be unavailable to them without the wind towers perched atop their property.
This country of "haves" has forgotten the very nature of why our country is great; ingenuity, hard work, sacrifice, economic and personal freedom. Instead, the people seem ever increasingly absorbed into the splits, and differences, pushed by a select few, and causing hatred, and division among the masses.
When the Netherlands sought to bring land from ocean bed, they knew that to do so would require sacrifice, and thus windmill generated pumps were placed on every home. Though out of necessity it may have been, the current climate of fear generated by the left about global warming--something I am not certain is necessarily man made, but which could be exacerbated by man's ignorance in regards the global impact he has, and the ignorance of the science belying the subject--has driven us to much the same dilemma.
The History Channel delved into this subject matter in a week long diatribe, supposedly assuring us all that global climate warming/change is man made, precluding the "Little Ice Age," the "Ice Age," and other weather, climate, and ecological disasters which have created environmental and climate change (volcano eruptions which created the 1816 year without a summer) . However, one show caught my attention when they mentioned that the very particulates which clean the air of Carbon Dioxide (CO2), have been the very ones we have, in our fervent desire to show how environ"mental"ly aware we are, legislated be cleaned from exudation of coal fired power plants. Certainly, anyone with knowledge of the affects of Sulfur Dioxide emissions propensity to mix with other chemicals to form sulfuric acid--which has been responsible for killing fish in lakes, and river estuaries, in the northeastern U.S. And Canada, and may possibly be affecting certain species of trees, and their die offs--knows that trade offs occur in nature all the time. Of course, in nature, like every other plant and animal, trees, too, die.
Which brings us back to the left and their desire to see us trying our utmost to prevent the use of carbon fuels, and instead seek alternative sources. One such source is wind power. Our nation's people are firstly, in my opinion, being sold a bill of goods wherein man made global climate change is a topic of interest, self profession and aggrandizement--AlGore's book "In the Balance," which predicted doom and gloom for our current generation if the past generation didn't change our habits of oil use, and environmentally unsound practices, in regards all aspects of life enriching advancements in the way mankind did things, and now his movie "An Inconvenient Truth," which parrots the original book but with a supposed neo-urgency.
The agrarian approach he welcomed would only be possible if we, as a nation, would decide that the best alternative to chemical fertilizers, pesticides, herbicides, rodenticides, and the like was a comprehensive manned program of planting, harvesting, bug picking, weeding, and all in between processes, something our modern day elitist mentality would preclude. No one wants to be in the fields day in, and day out, toiling, else we would see fewer people on welfare, and Social Security. We, Americans, have become enamored of our lives of leisure, food aplenty, television, sports events (bread and circuses), and nothing can determine for us, short of actual bondage, that we are to become drones in the fields, orchards, and farmlands, of America.
Thus, our alternatives are few, and according to the environ"mental"ists, necessary. Solar, wind, water, and nuclear plants must supplant the use of wood, coal, gas and oil for electric generation. Illegal aliens must supplant those on welfare, and Social Security.
The problem is, where are these new alternatives to be put. The NIMBY (Not In My Back Yard) approach is that it should always be elsewhere. The noise pollution, ecological pollution, or lack of it, the unsightly towers, the possibility that more birds will die as a result of our wind towers, are all decisions we must make for the common good. Is it better to advance the commonality, and embrace change, whether for the better, or not, or do we continue to waste energy and resources better spent on other things to advance causes, and fight those who are against those causes. Certainly advances in wind power generation are possible which eliminate the burdensome noise, but even with those, some would complain of the unsightly windmill, cell tower, or other in their neighborhood.
We cannot build more oil production facilities until someone decides that they are welcome where they are living. The jobs they might provide are considered anathema given the toxic nature of oil, and the processes necessary to change it into usable commodities such as gas, plastics, fertilizers, and the like.
The alternatives are much less polluting, but still a contentious issue, which I think boils down to one thing; a "learned" hatred--caused by those authors of division in our political spectrum--of those who have the ability (land) to amass to themselves greater wealth. This is apparent in almost every one of these arguments against alternative energy sources.
We, as a nation, have been dumbed down, primarily by our politicians on the left (socialists), to the point that we would believe the few who would become our taskmasters, and rib us into believing as they; a peer mentality followed to its ultimate conclusion in a society where success is derided, the wealth generated by it taxed for the supposed benefit of the masses to the detriment of those very masses. Job creation, power generation, success, innovation, all must come from someone who took a chance, and made something of themselves, or their talents, and who hired others to help foster that continued success. Those who would decry the local landowner from building a wind tower do so more because they aren't able to benefit from it financially, than because it is might create some other detriment to the common good.
Certainly, given local politics, those in office must weigh whether the benefit of wind towers is worth their future political aims, and goals. No longer is politics about doing what is right, but about doing what the majority declares to be right. Laws such as mandatory seat belt use, child car seats, etc., all have their own benefits, and drawbacks.
What we truly need in this era, is politicians who will do what is right based on the Constitution, more than what is right based on the will of the majority. In all cases where the majority rules, soon freedom disintegrates, and becomes non-existent. We are slowly headed toward the sole climactic event which pushes our freedom to the wayside, and creates slaving drones of us all. If not through taxation for the good of some few (the children in most cases, socialized health care, or other), then for some other perceived threat.
It is time that we as a nation made choices based on logical, sound, reasoned debate, and on principles grounded in our nation's best interests. That cannot occur in a democracy (majority rule), nor where a socialist, or national socialist (NAZI), state has evolved from such. We all know the consequences of socialism/communism, and NAZIism. If you don't, then chide your teachers who failed to direct you to it, or yourselves who failed to take into account what the teachers were telling you. The only way the logical conclusion can occur is if we, as a people, decide that the best interest is served in a nation where freedom is intertwined with moral values, and the sanctity of life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness by each and every one of us as ensconced in our nation's Declaration of independence, and Constitution's Bill of Rights.
May God continue to bless a Constitutional Republican (not democratic, socialist, communist, nationalist, or NAZI) America. Unfortunately, Constitutional Republican America hasn't existed for almost 80 years, and perhaps longer.