Which is obviously complete bullshit. National Security is the 'trump' card played to explain almost every inexplicable policy. It comes with the added advantage that if someone doesn't want to play the game you get to label them as 'not a patriot'.
If you are a government against renewable energy (for whatever reason) you should have enough ways to stop or slow down the process in general. Why are these specific projects so important that you are risking to get sued and lose?
Because they get to make a little bit more money in the short term. It's funny though: they're tilting at windmills in the most literal sense of the world. Or, it would be funny if not for the consequences.
Can anyone steelman this in any way that makes sense?
The best I could come up with is that windfarms might clutter up radar images for low-level (cruise missile or similar) attacks. Is that a realistic concern?
Can anyone come up with a real reason that would make sense?
And, of course, if you say "baloney, in what possible way does this affect national security?", the administration can respond, "we can't tell you because of national security". So you can't definitively say that it's baloney, because they won't tell you what their alleged reasoning is.
Which is obviously complete bullshit. National Security is the 'trump' card played to explain almost every inexplicable policy. It comes with the added advantage that if someone doesn't want to play the game you get to label them as 'not a patriot'.
I don't get the why.
If you are a government against renewable energy (for whatever reason) you should have enough ways to stop or slow down the process in general. Why are these specific projects so important that you are risking to get sued and lose?
Because they get to make a little bit more money in the short term. It's funny though: they're tilting at windmills in the most literal sense of the world. Or, it would be funny if not for the consequences.
It's still kind of funny. Good catch. I love it when things are both literal and figurative at the same time.
More funny when you realize they were both called Don...
Can anyone steelman this in any way that makes sense?
The best I could come up with is that windfarms might clutter up radar images for low-level (cruise missile or similar) attacks. Is that a realistic concern?
Can anyone come up with a real reason that would make sense?
And, of course, if you say "baloney, in what possible way does this affect national security?", the administration can respond, "we can't tell you because of national security". So you can't definitively say that it's baloney, because they won't tell you what their alleged reasoning is.
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