Donald Trump Wind Turbine Eagle Mistake: Dead Israeli Falcon Sparks Ridicule
Donald Trump's wind turbine eagle mistake goes viral after he misidentified an Israeli falcon as a bald eagle. Read the analysis of this political blunder.
He wanted to save the bald eagle, but he couldn't recognize it. Former President Donald Trump's crusade against green energy has hit a bizarre new obstacle. In his latest attempt to vilify wind power, Trump used a photo of a dead bird to represent a fallen American icon—only for experts to point out it was actually an Israeli falcon.
Donald Trump Wind Turbine Eagle Mistake Explained
According to reports from Boing Boing, Trump shared a photo of a dead bird, claiming it was proof of the carnage caused by windmills. He identified the creature as a bald eagle, the national bird of the United States. However, the image was later identified as a falcon that had died in Israel years ago, far from any American wind farm.
Unfazed by the lack of factual backing, Trump decided the photo was further evidence that wind turbines are 'evil.' This incident marks another chapter in his long-standing fixation on wind power, which he has previously claimed causes cancer and kills 'all the birds.'
A Narrative Without Borders
Critics argue that this blunder highlights a total disregard for accuracy in favor of a pre-set political narrative. By misidentifying a foreign falcon as a domestic eagle, the former president has once again turned a complex environmental discussion into a viral moment of misinformation. Wind power advocates note that while turbine collisions do occur, the statistics are often dwarfed by other human-made hazards like glass buildings and domestic cats.
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