You’re driving down a stretch of familiar highway and the road in front of you is framed by gently undulating landscape. As you weave past a familiar corner, a single set of rotating blades emerges over the hill. Your skin bristles as you watch a silent herd of machines rise behind a shining lake.
Instantly, a hot sickness spreads through your viscera. A thick, seeping sensation that makes your turn away from the hills. A view you’ve gazed upon for decades is now blanketed by machines you hate — tall, slender representatives of an alien philosophy.
This instinctive revulsion plays a sizable role in how energy policy shifts in Australia. Despite the urgency with which technology must transition from harmful fuel types, the emotion of disgust holds sway over powerful and prominent influencers.
Treasurer Joe Hockey illustrated the prevalence of disgust whilst being interviewed on 2GB, regarding wind farms on the bounds of Lake George. Revulsion excused a moment of candid admission, in which he implied he’d actively investigated ways to see the wind farm dismantled.
“I must say I find those wind turbines around Lake George to be utterly offensive…..We can’t knock those ones off because they’re into locked-in schemes and there is a certain contractual obligation I’m told associated with those things.”
The Treasurer’s nausea has been matched by Prime Minister Tony Abbott’s paranoid anxiety about a clean technology invasion:
“Yes there’s an absolute forest of these things on the other side of the lake near Bungendore. I absolutely understand why people are anxious about these things that are sprouting like mushrooms all over the fields of our country”
The Prime Minister and the Federal Treasurer, repulsed by machines that harvest a resource, are two of the most powerful men in the country.
The machines patiently continue to generate electricity on the ridges bounding Lake George, inspiring roiling discontent in a select portion of those rolling into the political core of the country.