Nuclear Comeback
After decades of demonizing nuclear power, governments across the West are suddenly backpedaling — fast.
Last week alone:
- Denmark repealed its 1985 ban on nuclear power.
- Belgium officially scrapped its nuclear phaseout.
- Germany — yes, Germany — announced it will no longer oppose nuclear in EU policy talks.
- In the U.S., Massachusetts is openly considering lifting its nuclear moratorium.
- And in Asia, Taiwan just moved to hold a referendum on restarting its mothballed Maanshan nuclear plant.
Some of the most diehard anti-nuclear nations on Earth are now scrambling to reverse course.
The reason is brutally simple: the so-called ‘green transition’ is collapsing under its own weight.
Solar and wind can’t carry the base load. Grid instability has risen to the point where entire nations are going dark. And the public is growing tired of sky-high energy prices while politicians endlessly spout “net zero” fantasies.
Even climate poster kids like Sweden and Finland have doubled down on nuclear expansion. While in the U.S., even California — the spiritual home of progressive energy policy — delayed the closure of its Diablo Canyon nuclear plant last year.
The Big Green U-turn
The globalist obsession with decarbonization ignored the one proven solution that doesn’t require freezing in the dark or covering every hillside with Chinese-made solar panels: nuclear power.
For decades, activists —brainwashed by misguided ideologues— smeared nuclear as dangerous, despite a stellar safety record compared to coal, gas, or even hydropower.
A corrupted establishment wasn’t actually seeking a solution, is my assumption — the goal was to cripple the West.
But now that story is collapsing. Fast.
The climate cult can’t ignore the math anymore: if you want carbon-free electricity and a functioning economy, you can’t get there without uranium. The cult can’t continue to ignore the fury of the people either, ordinary families who are sick to death of needlessly high energy costs, of energy poverty, with a growing threat of blackouts.
Clearly, this sudden embrace of nuclear is a political panic move, as ‘leaders’ have cottoned-on that their fantasy energy policies have now pushed citizens to breaking point. This is an ideological u-turn disguised as “pragmatism.”
The real solution isn’t nuclear — it’s purging the infiltration that’s rotted Western politics from within.