Sunday, April 14, 2019

Midnight Meme Of The Day!

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by Noah

Sunday Thoughts:

Now that their raving lunatic leader Donald Trump has gone and claimed that windmills cause cancer, it's only a matter of time before his fellow inmates in Republican Jesusville start attributing all sorts of things to "evil windmills." Wind power is the new "Great Satan" of the sick Republican Hive Mind.

I can see Mike Pence and Lindsey Graham suffering great pangs of inner conflict. I can see Alex Jones' Info Wars and "FOX News" doing hours and hours on the topic. Senile Lou Dobbs will shake his fist at the winds and blame "the gays" for a destructive F4 tornado in Oklahoma. Pat Robertson, with his history of blaming gay people for all of society's ills, will be a special guest on Hannity, replacing fellow asylum denizen Rudy Giuliani. Maybe even both loons will appear together with Sean a couple of nights per week. Wouldn't that be special? FOX And Fiends will be all in just like they were with that fake story about the Los Angeles Police zooming around LA with jet packs on their backs, Obama being born in Kenya, etc. Tucker Carlson will start sweating profusely and call upon a contractor to seal all of his windows shut permanently. Then, one night, live on the air, he'll start panicking and screaming about the breeze of the air conditioning in the TV studio. The screen will go blank black and then be replaced by a rainbow test pattern accompanied by the steady hum of wind turbines, thus proving the conspiracy was true all along, at least in the minds of these sickos.

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Wednesday, April 10, 2019

Midnight Meme Of The Day!

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by Noah

One day Trump says his father was born in Germany. He wasn't. The next day he says we shouldn't invest in power supplied by wind because "windmills cause cancer." Every other day, he encourages chemical corporations to increase the dumping of chemicals into our water supplies while extolling the healthful benefits of "clean" coal. Sure, it's believable that Trump's father was born in Germany, just as it would be all too believable to think that Trump's father slept in a Nazi uniform until the day he died, but, Fred Trump was born in the Bronx. Little Donnie probably even had flannel pajamas with a nice swastika pattern. Would it surprise you if he still does?

Trump's claim about windmills was even too loonie for his two Republican nut job Senators from Iowa, a state that has a lot of wind farms. Of course, they're no doubt pushing to the front of the line to partake in some side cash from wind power companies. Trump could have said lots of things about wind farms, like he did when the proposal for a giant wind farm within view of his Scottish golf course first came up. That's gotta be a big reason for his negative fixation on windmills; not in my backyard! He even says that the power cuts out when the wind slows down. He's Bizarro World Donnie Quixote, tilting at windmills.

But, windmills cause cancer? That's real special. He even says it's the noise they make. How long before he's claiming that they speak to him in critical tones?

Trump has sex with porn stars and who knows what else, and he's worried about windmills being detrimental to his health? For years, I have thought that Trump's brain is being eaten away by syphilis. It seems to fit. His mental grasp on anything is more shaky than a 9.9 earthquake. It's getting worse by the day. I'd love to know how many times a day he looks at Melania and Kellyanne and asks them "Who are you and what are you doing here?" Only his titanic ego prevents him from asking the same question when he peers into a mirror.

Drink a nice tall glass of kerosene, Donnie. And strike a match.


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Saturday, March 30, 2019

Trump's Vengeance Knows No Bounds And His Latest Target Is The Wind

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Trump was howling at the wind all week. He hates the wind. The wind has been attacking that thing on top of his head for decades and he's been battling it near his golf resort in Scotland for many years. On Wednesday he launched a salvo against wind from the safety of Sean Hannity's Fox show, calling it an unreliable energy source because it "only blows sometimes." And on Thursday, the wind was one of his many enemies to eviscerate during his standup comedy routine during his Grand Rapids, Michigan hate rally, telling an audienceful of morons that they would experience power outages when the wind doesn't blow. "If it doesn't blow, you can forget about television for that night. I know a lot about wind." He doesn't know anything about the wind except what it does to his weave.




Sure, California may have the largest single wind farm in America (at the Alta Wind Energy Center at the Tehachapi Pass in Kern County, generating enough electricity to power 450,000 homes in Kevin McCarthy's district) but the state that generates the most electricity from wind (15% of the state's capacity) is Texas. And the state generating the highest percentage of energy from wind power is Iowa. North Dakota, another Trump-lovin' state, has the most per capita wind generation in the U.S. Of the 10 biggest wind farms in America 4 are in Texas and one's in Indiana, Trump states. Fourteen states now have 10% or more of their generation coming from wind power. Most of these Trump states. These are the states where wind is keeping the most lights and TVs on: Iowa (36.6%), South Dakota (30.3%), Kansas (29.6%), Oklahoma (25.1%), North Dakota (21.5), Minnesota, Nebraska, Colorado, New Mexico, Texas, Maine, Vermont, Oregon and Idaho. The 5 states with the most wind capacity installed by early 2017 were:
Texas- 20,321 MW
Iowa- 6,917 MW
Oklahoma- 6,645 MW
California- 5,662 MW
Kansas- 4,452 MW
So where were Senators Cornyn, Cruz, Grassley, Ernst, Inhofe, Lankford, Roberts and Moran, all Republicans, when Trump was mouthing off about what an ineffective waste developing wind energy is? Why weren't they defending their own states' immense wind energy investments and industries?

Not even counting Alaska and Hawaii, which have immense potential for wind power electricity generation, the National Renewable Energy Laboratory, estimates the contiguous United States has the potential for onshore wind generation that is nine times larger than current total U.S. electricity consumption. Offshore potential is almost half that again!

Trump should read his own Department of Energy's Frequently Asked Questions. He might have found out a lot about wind energy before he made a fool of himself all week berating it:
What Is Wind Energy?
Wind energy (or wind power) refers to the process by which wind turbines convert the movement of wind into electricity. Winds are caused by the uneven heating of the atmosphere by the sun, the irregularities of the earth's surface, and rotation of the earth. Humans use this wind flow for many purposes: sailing boats, pumping water, and also generating electricity. Wind turbines convert the kinetic energy of the moving wind into electricity.
What Happens To The Electricity Supply When The Wind Isn't Blowing? Does Wind Need To Be "Backed Up" By Other Sources Of Power Generation?
The U.S. power grid consists of a huge number of interconnected transmission lines that connect a variety of generation sources to loads. The wind does not always blow and the sun doesn't always shine, which creates additional variability (due to the changing output of wind and solar) and uncertainty (due to the inability to perfectly forecast wind or solar output).

But power grid operators have always had to deal with variability. Other forms of power generation, including traditional thermal generation, can unexpectedly trip off-line without notice; all forms of power generation may sometimes not operate when called upon. There is also uncertainty inherent in the system due to ever-changing load (energy demand) that cannot be predicted perfectly, which power grid operators have always had to manage.

Grid operators use the interconnected power system to access other forms of generation when contingencies occur and continually turn generators on and off when needed to meet the overall grid demand.

Adding variable renewable power to the grid does not inherently change how this process of balancing electricity supply and demand works. Studies have shown that the grid can accommodate large penetrations of variable renewable power without sacrificing reliability, and without the need for "backup" generation.
Where Are Wind Turbines Manufactured?
Most of the components of wind turbines installed in the United States are manufactured here. There are 500 wind-related manufacturing facilities located across 41 states, and the U.S. wind industry currently employs more than 101,000 people.
Where Are Wind Farms Located?
There are utility-scale wind farms in 41 U.S. states and distributed wind deployed in all 50 states, Washington DC, Puerto Rico, and Guam... Globally, the United States ranks second in both installed capacity and electricity generation from wind, behind China. Denmark, Portugal, and Ireland each get more than 20% of their nations’ electricity from wind.
How Much Energy Comes From Wind In The U.S.?
Wind power supplies about 6% of total U.S. electricity generation with an installed capacity of over 80 gigawatts. That’s enough to power 24 million homes. Wind supplies more than 30% of electricity in Iowa and South Dakota, and more than 10% in twelve other states.
Is Wind More Expensive Than Other Forms Of Energy?
The average levelized cost of wind power purchase agreements signed in recent years has been 2–3 cents per kilowatt hour, depending on the wind resource and the project’s financing. Because the electricity from wind farms is sold at a fixed price over a long period of time (e.g. 20 years) and its fuel is free, wind energy mitigates the price uncertainty that fuel costs add to traditional sources of energy.

In windy areas like the Midwestern United States, wind energy is cost-competitive with building a new natural gas fired power plant, and continued research and development could cut the cost of wind energy in half by 2030, bringing the unsubsidized cost of wind energy below the projected cost of fuel for existing natural gas plants. Wind projects compare favorably with other forms of energy through 2040.

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