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A free floating commentary on culture, politics, economics, and religion based on a passionate commitment to the truth and a desire graciously to refute that which is contrary to it….
"He must hold firm to the sure word as taught, so that he may be able to give instruction in sound doctrine and also to confute those who contradict it."
--Titus 1:9, Revised Standard Version
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[Whew! NY Times to the rescue! The blog was getting really heavy on the Theology category this morning. Here’s something a bit lighter… Loved the Cruella De Vil line!
]
BEACH HAVEN TERRACE, N.J.,
July 10 — Tired of paying as much as $340 per month for gas and electricity at the Cape Cod home here where he has lived for 18 months, Michael Mercurio erected a 35-foot windmill in his backyard last fall that helped reduce his bill to about $114 — a year.
“It just makes sense,” said Mr. Mercurio, who is 61 and runs a company selling and installing windmills. “This is a clean, renewable source of energy.”
Some of his neighbors say it is also annoying. They say it is too big. They say it is too noisy. And some residents in this middle-class borough on Long Beach Island have gone to court to try to make him take it down, while the township has stilled it since winter.
It is a collision between the ideals of alternative energy and the suburban reality of New Jersey’s notorious not-in-my-backyard culture, casting Mr. Mercurio in the role of a latter-day environmental knight errant and his neighbor and principal adversary as the ecological equivalent of Cruella De Vil.
What started as one man’s attempts to find a cheap, clean energy source has become a frequent topic of coffee conversation among the small community of year-round residents in this town, where Mr. Mercurio has lived since he was 4, and has galvanized some segments of the state’s environmental community. And, oh, how the Don Quixote jokes have flowed.
“I hear it all the time,” Mr. Mercurio said, standing in the shadow of his still windmill Tuesday afternoon. “I tell them, ‘You’ve got it all wrong: I’m not fighting against the windmills, I’m fighting for the windmills.’ ”
Filed under: * Culture-Watch Law & Legal Issues * Economics, Politics Energy, Natural Resources

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2. In Texas wrote:
It is so easy being green - you can replace your light bulbs, buy a Prius, but don’t put a windmill in my backyard or obstruct my view of the ocean. July 11, 9:30 am | [comment link] |
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3. KAR wrote:
It is so easy being green - you can replace your light bulbs, buy a Prius Not really, going from 100W light blub to 17W will conserve 83W an hour, at ten that’s 830W, but your small sacrifice of your ocean view can generate 10KW an hour. Wind is a very mature alternative energy, much more efficient than solar which commercially is around 10% efficiency (some exciting DOE grant development from Boeing have reach 40% in the lab). Here is the hypocrisies of the ‘green movement’ is that they desire to keep it convenient. Everything has trade off and to truly be ‘green’ takes actual radical life-style changes. Thus is the positive externalities of reduced CO2 emission (presuming coal, so no security issues) worth the trade-off of the negative externalities of a decrease view and some noise pollution? July 11, 9:45 am | [comment link] |
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4. Steven in Falls Church wrote:
I think there is a point to the suit. It is one thing to complain about windmill towers several miles off the coast, which is the case with the Cape Cod project, and another when the tower is next door and is producing an incessant sound and annoying shadows on your back yard. The latter, it would seem, meets a reasonable definition of a nuisance. July 11, 10:14 am | [comment link] |
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5. Sue Martinez wrote:
From Woman’s Day magazine August 1, 2007, p. 18.
I’m doing extremely well to remember to turn the @#$% lights off when I’m not using them but I refuse to unplug lamps every time I turn them off. Will the Eco Police come and take me away? July 11, 10:28 am | [comment link] |
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6. libraryjim wrote:
Florida laws actually prohibit homeowners associations from banning windmills, but not many people know about it to challenge HOA covenants:
(Bold text added for emphasis) July 11, 10:30 am | [comment link] |
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7. libraryjim wrote:
Sorry I forgot to include the link: By the way, section 2 above is the section I should have bolded! ah, too early to be thinking, anyway. Peace |
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8. Connecticutian wrote:
We had this controversy in my nearby hometown. Eventually, the town granted the variance over the neighbors’ objections. But they are now at work on crafting some appropriate regulations. Shortly after, the senior class of the local prep school decided their parting gift to the school would be a windmill. I say good for them! #4 has a point, but not a terriby strong one, IMHO. Are shadows more annoying that a yard full of leaves, for example? Probably not, I don’t have to rake up my neighbor’s shadow. But would I have a right to cut down his tree if it’s shedding into my yard? Probably not, I just have to be a good neighbor and live with it. July 11, 1:24 pm | [comment link] |
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9. Katherine wrote:
Windmills are trendy, but besides the noise, when installed in numbers they are a disaster for migratory birds. There’s always a trade-off. |
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10. libraryjim wrote:
Tallahassee is going to be building a waste-incinerator power plant to suppliment our current natural gas plant. Bay County (Panama City) has had one for years. July 11, 1:38 pm | [comment link] |
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11. Bill C wrote:
Recycling is all well and good. But have you noticed that the greenest of the green are in truth black in their use of private jets, expensive cars, and overly large homes! July 11, 2:03 pm | [comment link] |
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12. libraryjim wrote:
Bill, |
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13. Sue Martinez wrote:
What I’m about to say seemed to be off-topic yesterday, but the discussion has morphed to “environmental damage by the ‘greens.’” An excerpt from
The author then relates how refining the nickel and manufacturing the Prius battery causes even more damage. I couldn’t find any data on the plant that was recent, so I hope that this wasteland has been cleaned up. It’s true, though, that Toyota can’t make enough Prius cars to keep up with the demand for them, and now that Al Gore, Jr. has proved that they can go at least 100 mph, they’ve lost their reputation as “wimpy.” July 12, 3:43 pm | [comment link] |
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14. libraryjim wrote:
We looked into going solar when we moved to Tallahassee. However, the cost of converting an existing structure (the house—builder spec—was 80% completed when we bought it) would have added way too much to the purchase price of the house. If one is starting from scratch to build a house, it’s much easier to figure the cost into the plans. But not afterwards. We did look into it again last year, when there were rumors of tax-rebates for water heating systems. However, the price had gone up, and the people we spoke to didn’t have much positive to say for the cost-recovery of post-building installation. Our neighbors (not the crazy ones, but two houses down) put in a solar pool heater when they had the pool installed four years ago. That would definately be worth it. July 12, 5:36 pm | [comment link] |
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15. NWOhio Anglican wrote:
The phone charger I can see—transformers always draw some power even when they are not connected to anything on the other end—but the lamp?? If your lamp is drawing electricity when it’s turned off, you need to replace the switch now; you’ve got more than wasted electricity to worry about! (i.e. short circuit = electrical fire) July 14, 9:39 am | [comment link] |
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This is the same rhetoric Ted Kennedy used to halt a windmill project off Nantucket. Although his main complaint was that it would ruin the view from his back deck.
July 11, 9:23 am | [comment link]