Trump Was Right to Skewer Starmer Over Britain’s “Windmills Scam”

This week, Keir Starmer and Donald Trump met at the US President’s golf resort in Turnberry, Scotland. During the televised discussion, a squirming Starmer was put in his place several times by the President’s forthright comments on a number of subjects, including the closure of North Sea oil and gas operations and free speech. Most notably, Trump called wind power a “scam”, which was no longer welcome in the USA. Like a scene from The Office, it was as uncomfortable to watch as it must have been for Starmer, who, in the face of the onslaught, looked for all the world like a David Brent figure. Struggling to explain his own position without inducing extreme cringe, but at the same time as signalling his lack of confidence, the PM made clear his inability to understand the criticism in any seriousness.

Trump’s comments that wind farms are ugly, environmentally destructive and expensive need little rehearsal. These are the criticisms of wind power that have been made by critics for the two decades that the UK has been subsidising them. In the 2000s, the claim was that these seemingly nascent technologies needed a ‘kickstart’ to bring them to the maturity of conventional energy technologies. Yet decades on, as has been reported here recently, the latest auction for renewable energy contracts shows that the costs are, as predicted decades ago, still rising, as are energy bills.


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RTSC
RTSC
8 months ago

Watching Trump humiliate Two-Tier wasn’t uncomfortable. It was pure joy. He was right about tax, immigration and farming, as well as the windmills/Net Zero SCAM.

Dear God

So far this year, you’ve taken my favourite writer, Frederick Forsyth; my favourite actor, Gene Hackman; and now my favourite singer, Ozzy Osborne.

Can I please remind you that my favourite politician is Keir Starmer?

Marcus Aurelius knew
8 months ago
Reply to  RTSC

Nah, I want him kept alive as long as possible. Wearing a facemask, living in Palestine, and getting monthly jabs in both arms.

huxleypiggles
8 months ago

Before he gets chucked off a roof eh M A k?

Westfieldmike
Westfieldmike
8 months ago
Reply to  huxleypiggles

we can only hope

WillP
8 months ago

Verhofstadt’s incredulity, as cheerleader in chief for the EU, merely illustrates the extent of self important delusion a career of no opposition, free lunches and 5* hotels can induce.

stewart
8 months ago
Reply to  WillP

The gravy train is just a small aspect of it.

My reading of history is that major shifts in policy only come with new people as the incumbents are too wedded to their policies.

The problem the EU has is that there is no real mechanism for changing the people. They all come from the same pool of technocrat bureaucrats all of whom.are wedded to the current policies.

You can at.least see a route to change in the UK, with Reform, maybe, if the blob let’s them. Big if.

And clearly new.leadership in the US is trying to change course there.

But its hard to see how it happens in the EU.

Marcus Aurelius knew
8 months ago
Reply to  stewart

Frexit? Exitaly/Ituscita? Deutschlausfahrt? Polskuciec?

Neighbours here in France want Frexit…

EARLGRAY
EARLGRAY
8 months ago

I have friends in Spain, Italy and France and they were all jealous when the UK held its Brexit referendum. I am convinced that if a ‘free’ referendum were to be held throughout the EU the result would shock the political ‘elite’ to the core.

Derry104
Derry104
8 months ago
Reply to  EARLGRAY

I don’t think it would shock them at all – they would expect it – that’s why they will move heaven and earth to ensure it doesn’t happen.

Hound of Heaven
Hound of Heaven
8 months ago
Reply to  stewart

Because it is not a country.

Jay Smith
Jay Smith
8 months ago

Thank you. Brilliant resumé.

huxleypiggles
8 months ago
Reply to  Jay Smith

Indeed.

DiscoveredJoys
DiscoveredJoys
8 months ago

In the next auction round for renewable energy contracts…

It is perhaps PFI for the twenty-first century. AI tells us:

PFI stands for Private Finance Initiative, which is a procurement method used in the UK where private companies are contracted to build and manage public projects, such as hospitals and roads, with the government paying to use them. “

Dinger64
8 months ago

So far this week we’ve had 3 power outages over here in Ireland, one for 3hrs and two more for 4hrs, in one week! These were not breakdowns, they were ‘controlled demand reduction’ (rationing in short)
Ireland is in a serious mess with its energy security and is working harder to cover it up than to solve the problem
Heed this example of a very dodgy future that is awaiting the west

transmissionofflame
8 months ago
Reply to  Dinger64

Our grid is current sending yours 1.48GW which is probably a fair chunk of your current demand, but that is not because we have a surplus – it comes out of the at present 20% of demand we are currently importing from France and others. France alone is sending us more than all our domestic windmills are generating.

JXB
JXB
8 months ago

11:45am Wednesday 30 July… UK grid demand – 32.4GW: Wind – 1.87GW (5.82%), solar – 6.57GW (20.44%), gas – 8.13GW (25.30%), nuclear – 4.12GW (12.82%), Euro interconnectors – 7.4GW ~ 5%.

0.47GW going to Ireland.

Thqn goodness for solar or we would be in trouble. Let’s hope the sun keeps shining.

transmissionofflame
8 months ago
Reply to  JXB

Yeah the U.K. is known for its consistent sunshine, especially at night

The Real Engineer
The Real Engineer
8 months ago

Precisely.

The Real Engineer
The Real Engineer
8 months ago
Reply to  JXB

Solar is a big part of the problem! In Winter it does virtually nothing. Your numbers are wrong BTW, Our nuclear is 12% at 4.12GW but the Interconnectors are 5% at 7.4GW. Maths is not your strong subject I suppose!

Dinger64
8 months ago
Reply to  Dinger64

Ps: power has just gone off AGAIN this morning from 10am until 5pm!

Purpleone
8 months ago
Reply to  Dinger64

So are you saying you don’t think you can run a first world economy with daily power rationing? 😉

mad isn’t it – someone needs to tell the politicians…

JeremyP99
8 months ago

Starmer looked like a little boy trying hard not to poo in his pants…

huxleypiggles
8 months ago
Reply to  JeremyP99

😀😀😀

Perfect.

Gezza England
Gezza England
8 months ago
Reply to  huxleypiggles

The best bit was when Trump called out Sir Knife Crime and just to show how unpleasant this little creep is he has been wailing that what Donald said about him was ‘waycist’.

JXB
JXB
8 months ago
Reply to  JeremyP99

And not succeeding.

V Detta
V Detta
8 months ago
Reply to  JeremyP99

…..whilst sat on a skewer….

JXB
JXB
8 months ago

The harvest of wind farms is subsidies – money plundered from taxpayers.

Westfieldmike
Westfieldmike
8 months ago

Starmer’s face was hilarious, and have you noticed his odd hand gestures? That’s because he’s been coached. A brain dead WEF drone.

Purpleone
8 months ago
Reply to  Westfieldmike

He’s certainly no poker player, that’s for sure!

Monro
8 months ago

‘Russia and China emerged (or re-emerged) as superpowers alongside the USA’

Or not really….

Putin and Russia are to Xi and China as Starmer and Britain are to President Trump and the U.S.A.

rafe.champion
rafe.champion
8 months ago

The wind and solar fantasy will collapse like a punctured balloon when people realise how often there is next to no RE in the grid at breakfast and dinnertime.  This is the dashboard for the power supply in Great Britain.   It is a live display so it changes frequently. https://grid.iamkate.com/    At midnight wind and sun provided 26% of demand and at 9am it was 30%. The lights are kept on by deindustrialization which reduces demand, and power from overseas. No amount of extra windmills will help when there is next to no wind during the wind droughts (Dunkelflautes.) If the authorities had taken account of wind droughts, quite likely no windmills would be attached to the grid Trillions of dollars have been spent around the world rolling out unreliable energy generators and in return we have more expensive and less reliable power with catastrophic environmental impacts. The elephant in the net zero room is the wind droughts or dunkelflautes that Australian investigators documented over a decade ago. https://rafechampion.substack.com/p/the-late-discovery-of-wind-droughts Dirt farmers are alert to the threat of rain droughts, but the wind farmers never checked the reliability of the wind supply to become aware of wind droughts, wind lulls, known as Dunkelflautes… Read more »