Antediluvian Obstinacy

Created
Mon, 05/02/2024 - 06:00
Updated
Mon, 05/02/2024 - 06:00
When Real Americans cut off their noses to spite their faces: Donna Knoche made her way up to the podium at the Johnson County Commission hearing on June 6, 2022, her new yellow shirt crisp and her voice steady. It wasn’t something she’d ever thought she’d have to do in her 93 years in the place her grandfather first homesteaded in the 1860s. Calmly setting aside her walker, she looked at the county commissioners arrayed to her left and began to speak. “I never in all my life thought I would stand up here to protect our property rights by being able to use our land legally for the best benefit of our family,” she said. To her right, scores of people were in line behind her. Many of them had other ideas.  Some implored the commissioners to vote to allow the so-called West Gardner plan, a utility-size array of solar panels, saying the county needed to commit to clean energy for their children’s future. But others were just as passionately opposed. Many wore matching T-shirts that implored the council to “Stop INDUSTRIAL SOLAR,” testifying for more than three hours against the plan for Knoche’s farm and others across the county.  To them, the solar plant  would “threaten health and well-being” and did not fit “the character of the land.” It would create “a landscape of black glass and towering windmills,” that would put lives at risk and cause “a mass exodus out of the area.” The fight played out in front…