[ExI] Gilded Rage: Elon Musk and the Radicalization of Silicon Valley
    Keith Henson 
    hkeithhenson at gmail.com
       
    Sat Oct 25 17:02:10 UTC 2025
    
    
  
On Sat, Oct 25, 2025 at 8:06 AM <spike at rainier66.com> wrote:
snip
> Sure but for tax advantages, wind turbines have been placed in locations which are sub-optimal and don’t really generate enough power to break even.
Can you cite any published study on this?
 A cross country plane flight reveals apparently bankrupt wind farms,
with wind turbines which are out of service, perhaps from a lighting
strike.  If we really need rare earth metals, those would be an
excellent source.
I don't know if the demand for RE elements matches the RE elements in
wind turbines.  Do you?
Also, I am not aware of RE elements being used in Nvidia chips.  Do
you know which ones and how they are used?  It has been a while since
I looked into the construction of high-performance chips.
Keith
> Telsa uses REEs in their electric motors, so they must have a reserve somewhere.  So have Nvidia buy Elon’s REEs, make all the chips and F18s we need with just the REEs from a few defunct turbines and Telsa electric cars (which are in an unexpectedly flat market anyway.)  We really don’t need much of the REEs to make either the chips or the fighter planes, and there were good EVs before the slight improvement REEs gave to electric motors.
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> F18s?  Do we really need more of those?  I think not: we are in the age of drones and AI warfare.  Fighter planes are already obsolete.
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> spike
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> -----Original Message-----
> From: Keith Henson <hkeithhenson at gmail.com>
> ...
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> > If anything super important is being held up, we can mine the permanent magnets in wind turbines.
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> >...I could not say.  I don't have a bill of materials for either an F35 or a windmill.  However, magnets are not the only use of REs in high-tech defense hardware.  The engineers should never have been permitted to design in materials that did not have a secure source... Keith
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> The wind turbines become the secure source.  Once one flies across the USA and realizes how damn many of those things have been planted over the years, you realize there is no real shortage of material, regardless of what China does.  There are pleeeeeenty of idle turbines, plenty.  Most of them are not generating enough power to bother keeping them.  Peak power happened during the most active turbine building phase.
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> spike
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