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Wind-sponsored exhibition against Kevon Martis Backfires – Watts Up With That?


From MasterSource

By Robert Bradley Jr. — May 1, 2023

“Authorization of legalization is a favorite tactic of climate alarm/energy transition minions. They couldn’t imagine that a rational, moral person could resist a plan to impose ‘clean’ energy on towns (really great outdoor ‘machines’). Kevon Martis proved them wrong and they couldn’t accept it. What will they come up with next?”

kevon martis was file many times at MasterResource. His grassroots power to turn truth into wind has been a game-changer in Michigan and elsewhere. And he is an ordinary person, the epitome of the hardworking, successful American.

A Michigan Capitol Confidential (Mackinac Center for Public Policy) news story tells the backstory of a Leviathan who tried to ‘attack’ Martis. Article by Jamie Hope (March 28, 2023), “Wind industry declares war on Michigan man,” is one that will resonate with every citizen of every town threatened by industrial wind turbines and/or government-backed solar arrays.

Hope reports, you decide:

Kevon Martis was introduced by Yale Climate Connections as a master manipulator. Wind energy activists believe they have found an explanation for the declining popularity of wind projects in Michigan and around the county: a sect of homeowners opposes turbines, according to a video new clip, completely absurd.

Like a cult‘, a 10-minute documentary-style video by environmental activist Peter Sinclair and Yale Climate Connections, attacking local residents and officials in Michigan who express concerns about wind energy projects in their town.

The video shows Kevon Martis, Deerfield Town zoning administrator and recently elected Lenawee County commissioner. Sinclair stitches together a dark web of brainwashing and gas torture, with Martis being the sect’s high priest — or “Big Cheese,” according to a subtitle.

The video attempts to link Martis to the April 2020 COVID-19 shutdown protests at the Michigan State Capitol in Lansing and the January 6, 2021 riots in Washington, DC

Sinclair blamed Martis for unwanted resident participation at town hall meetings, which revealed deep opposition and superficial support for transformative wind turbine projects. view. Popular opposition to wind turbines in Michigan is part of the national trend that handled ballot box failures in several states against giants like NextEra and Apex Clean Energy. But Sinclair believes he sees Martis’ fingerprints everywhere.

Sinclair said in the video: “Time and again, when Mr. Martis was involved, formerly normal meetings became a backdrop for anger and division. The video had 5,200 views as of March 28.

Sinclair, who admitted during a meeting in Saginaw County that he was paid by energy companies, however, criticized Martis for his work with Legal E&Ewhich he said has also received money from many similar companies.

Nor does the video mention that three of its most prominent actors — former local elected officials Jed Welder, Phyllis Larson and Terry Anderson — were all recalled by voters in elections that the opposition raged- bin is the main theme of the campaign.

Welder was the only person to vote against the ordinance in July 2021 to protect Sidney Township from an industrial-scale wind turbine project. He signed a wind power reduction agreement with Coral Wind I, LLC, a subsidiary of Apex Clean Energy in August 2020. Town supervisor Douglass Anderson was forced to apologize to local resident Cindy Shick after removed her from the planning committee because of rumors she had leaked documents to someone outside the committee. Shick was elected to replace the recalled Anderson.

Phyllis Larson is a supervisor for the Town of Winfield, who signed two wind leases and voted on a wind-friendly ordinance. The people then voted to reject the ordinance in a referendum. According to a story in Exciting news now of Montcalm County. Although local residents accused Larson and others of breaking public notice laws, no charges were brought.

Not sitting but not bowing, the three politicians are now criticizing the voters’ false sense. “It was almost like a cult deal,” Welder said of his neighbors and former voters, who opposed the turbine project. Ashlyn Newell, identified in the video as a resident of Maple Valley Town and a science teacher, said that town officials have been intimidated and the community remains fearful. She did not provide evidence of those claims.

Newell declined to mention that she and her husband signed a wind lease with Apex for their property. A wind lease memo was entered on October 23, 2020, according to the Montcalm County Deeds Registry. “Depending on the terms of the contract, typically hosting a wind turbine will bring in between $8,000 and $12,000 per year or more, depending on the size of the turbine,” Martis told the Michigan Capitol Confidential.

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Authorization is a favorite tactic of climate alarm minions/forced energy conversion. They couldn’t imagine that a rational, moral person could resist a plan to impose “clean” energy on towns (really great outdoor ‘machines’). Kevon Martis proved them wrong and they can’t accept it. What will they come up with next?

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