Oh, the irony: Save the planet, but murder whales, dolphins and other sea mammals. Yep, that's the ticket, for a "clean energy" world!
Who is Robert Malone cross-posted a post from RESCUE with Michael Capuzzo
Robert W Malone MD, MSJun 28 · Who is Robert Malone
More "unintended consequences" from short term government thinking compounded by regulatory capture.
When will they ever learn?
Whales Die, While Officials, Media, and Environmentalists Lie
"Save the Whales" is now "sacrifice the whales" to East Coast wind turbines, oil & gas drilling, and reporter lackeys for the marine-industrial complex. Sound familiar?
JUN 28
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GUEST POST
In Strathmere, New Jersey, the morning of December 10, 2022, began on a somber note.
A dead whale weighing an estimated twenty tons was spotted offshore, soon moved by tide and waves to the shoreline where beachgoers took photos and videos.
Identified as a young female humpback, the thirty-foot-long cetacean was examined by experts dispatched from the Brigantine Marine Mammal Stranding Center and found to have no signs of illness or injury. Later that afternoon the local public works department brought in its heavy equipment to bury her on the beach.
Despite the fact that whale deaths happen, this particular humpback who beached herself that overcast day in Strathmere could be called Whale One. Not just a doomed marine mammal, but a creature who was the first to become emblematic of an ominous plan to industrialize the ocean as quickly as possible. A plan that has made bizarre if unacknowledged bedfellows of environmentalists and their sworn enemies who drill for fossil fuels—and a plan that makes use of the most potent greenhouse gas ever known.
The young humpback became part of a movement that began with the asking of a question: What is killing the whales and dolphins?
The not-so-silent sounds of sonar
Along the Jersey Shore, several companies, including Atlantic Shores (owned jointly by oil and gas titan Shell and the French-based utility company EDF) and Danish-based Orsted, are mapping the ocean floor—the first step toward construction of hundreds of mammoth offshore wind turbines. Many will be smack in the face of some of the wealthiest shorefront communities on the East Coast. But it wasn’t just the soon-to-be disfigurement of the magnificent ocean views that got people really agitated. It was all those dead whales and dolphins.