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![onechancefreedm Avatar](https://lunarcrush.com/gi/w:24/cr:twitter::1448432122881101826.png) EndGame Macro [@onechancefreedm](/creator/twitter/onechancefreedm) on x 39.8K followers
Created: 2025-07-19 02:54:09 UTC

The claim that Russia secretly funded anti-nuclear environmental groups in Europe to make the EU more dependent on Russian gas might sound far fetched, but when you look at the results, Europe shutting down nuclear plants and scrambling for energy while buying Russian gas, it starts to make a disturbing kind of sense. And it should raise a serious question: who’s really behind the green energy push here in the U.S.? Because what we’re doing doesn’t always seem aligned with what’s actually best for the country or the planet.

Look at offshore wind. It was hyped as the cornerstone of our clean energy future. But now the cracks are showing. Projects are getting delayed or outright canceled due to insane cost overruns, equipment failures, supply chain issues, and public backlash. These wind farms are expensive to build, expensive to maintain, and they disrupt marine ecosystems, fishing zones, and even shipping routes. And worst of all, they don’t produce consistent or reliable energy. The entire offshore wind industry is being kept alive by subsidies and political momentum, not by performance, economics, or grid stability.

Meanwhile, the one technology that actually works, nuclear power, is being sidelined. It’s clean, scalable, and produces baseload power 24/7, with minimal emissions. So why are we phasing it out? Why are we shutting down nuclear plants and replacing them with intermittent, fragile alternatives that can’t stand on their own without government support? You start to realize this isn’t a rational energy transition, it’s a political and financial game.

Now, contrast that with what’s happening in China. China operates over XXXXX coal power plants, more than four times as many as India and massively more than the U.S. China now accounts for over XX% of global coal based electricity and has a coal power capacity exceeding XXXXX gigawatts, more than five times the U.S. level. They’re still building, too. While the West is tearing down its reliable energy backbone, China is doubling down on energy security, scale, and control. They’re playing the long game, anchoring their economic power in stable, domestic energy infrastructure, even if it’s not “clean” by Western definitions. That’s not hypocrisy. That’s strategy.

Not every green idea is automatically good. And when the loudest voices are trying to kill off nuclear while propping up expensive, unreliable projects like offshore wind, it’s time to stop and ask, what’s really going on here? Are we actually solving the energy problem? Or are we walking straight into a trap designed by those who benefit from our weakness?

Food for thought.

![](https://pbs.twimg.com/tweet_video_thumb/GwMDWXzWQAAGULg.jpg)

XXXXXX engagements

![Engagements Line Chart](https://lunarcrush.com/gi/w:600/p:tweet::1946403156482511177/c:line.svg)

**Related Topics**
[coins energy](/topic/coins-energy)
[russia](/topic/russia)
[macro](/topic/macro)
[endgame](/topic/endgame)

[Post Link](https://x.com/onechancefreedm/status/1946403156482511177)

[GUEST ACCESS MODE: Data is scrambled or limited to provide examples. Make requests using your API key to unlock full data. Check https://lunarcrush.ai/auth for authentication information.]

onechancefreedm Avatar EndGame Macro @onechancefreedm on x 39.8K followers Created: 2025-07-19 02:54:09 UTC

The claim that Russia secretly funded anti-nuclear environmental groups in Europe to make the EU more dependent on Russian gas might sound far fetched, but when you look at the results, Europe shutting down nuclear plants and scrambling for energy while buying Russian gas, it starts to make a disturbing kind of sense. And it should raise a serious question: who’s really behind the green energy push here in the U.S.? Because what we’re doing doesn’t always seem aligned with what’s actually best for the country or the planet.

Look at offshore wind. It was hyped as the cornerstone of our clean energy future. But now the cracks are showing. Projects are getting delayed or outright canceled due to insane cost overruns, equipment failures, supply chain issues, and public backlash. These wind farms are expensive to build, expensive to maintain, and they disrupt marine ecosystems, fishing zones, and even shipping routes. And worst of all, they don’t produce consistent or reliable energy. The entire offshore wind industry is being kept alive by subsidies and political momentum, not by performance, economics, or grid stability.

Meanwhile, the one technology that actually works, nuclear power, is being sidelined. It’s clean, scalable, and produces baseload power 24/7, with minimal emissions. So why are we phasing it out? Why are we shutting down nuclear plants and replacing them with intermittent, fragile alternatives that can’t stand on their own without government support? You start to realize this isn’t a rational energy transition, it’s a political and financial game.

Now, contrast that with what’s happening in China. China operates over XXXXX coal power plants, more than four times as many as India and massively more than the U.S. China now accounts for over XX% of global coal based electricity and has a coal power capacity exceeding XXXXX gigawatts, more than five times the U.S. level. They’re still building, too. While the West is tearing down its reliable energy backbone, China is doubling down on energy security, scale, and control. They’re playing the long game, anchoring their economic power in stable, domestic energy infrastructure, even if it’s not “clean” by Western definitions. That’s not hypocrisy. That’s strategy.

Not every green idea is automatically good. And when the loudest voices are trying to kill off nuclear while propping up expensive, unreliable projects like offshore wind, it’s time to stop and ask, what’s really going on here? Are we actually solving the energy problem? Or are we walking straight into a trap designed by those who benefit from our weakness?

Food for thought.

XXXXXX engagements

Engagements Line Chart

Related Topics coins energy russia macro endgame

Post Link

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