When it comes to “renewables” wreaking havoc on the environment, wind turbines have stiff competition. For example, over 500,000 square miles of biofuel plantations have already replaced farms and forests to replace a mere 4 percent of transportation fuel. Mining operations are scaling up to source raw materials to build “sustainable” batteries, with no end in sight, in nations with appalling labor conditions and nonexistent environmental regulations. But the worst offender is the wind industry. 
America’s wind power industry somehow manages to attract almost no negative coverage in the press or litigation from environmentalists, despite causing some of the most obvious and tragic environmental catastrophes so far this century. Last August I wrote about the ongoing slaughter of whales off America’s northeast coast thanks to the construction of offshore wind turbines:
“When you detonate massive explosives, repeatedly drive steel piles into the ocean floor with a hydraulic hammer, and blast high decibel sonar mapping signals underwater, you’re going to harm animals that rely on sound to orient themselves in the ocean. To say it is mere coincidence that hundreds of these creatures have washed ashore, dead,
all of a sudden, during precisely the same months when the blasting and pounding began, is brazen deception.”
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En su afán por lo novedoso, las nuevas generaciones suelen descartar a pensadores del pasado, en detrimento de la diversidad en las ideas. Algunos autores gozan de una vida literaria prolongada, gracias a lectores que encuentran en su obra, enseñanzas intemporales, válidas y vigentes. Excluirlos, sería borrar o echar al olvido una contribución intelectual única y exclusiva.

In 1831, a French aristocrat named Alexis de Tocqueville was commissioned to travel to the United States of America and report back on its prison systems. Once he arrived, however, Tocqueville became broadly fascinated with the upstart nation. Spending nine months in the U.S., Tocqueville richly observed the American people and America’s political system. His observations were published in two volumes, in 1835 and 1840, titled Democracy in America. Many things intrigued Tocqueville about America, and one of those was the practice of the Catholic faith in early America. Tocqueville’s insights ring true even today.