I recognize that Donny stirs interest here but honestly he is small potatoes in comparison to some of the names that have opposed the Cape Cod Wind Farm:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cape_Wind
Walter Cronkite was the subject of controversy as well when he originally came out against the wind farm but then changed his opinion.[50] Other opponents have included
Sen. Ted Kennedy,[51] Sen. John Kerry, former Gov. Mitt Romney, and businessman Bill Koch[52], who has donated $1.5 million to the Alliance to Protect Nantucket Sound.
Proponents suggest that some of this opposition is motivated in part by ownership of real-estate on Nantucket, Martha's Vineyard or the mainland and that it raises issues of environmental justice.
Robert Kennedy, Jr., whose family's Kennedy Compound is within sight of the proposed wind farm, wrote an essay for the New York Times stating his support for wind power in general, but opposing this project.[53] This doesn't represent the view of most Massachusetts citizens: in a 2005 survey, 81% of adults supported the project, 61% of Cape Cod residents supported it, and only 14% of adults oppose it.[54]
A recent book by Robert Whitcomb, Vice President and Editorial Page Editor of the Providence Journal, and Wendy Williams argues that the fight over Cape Wind involves a powerful, privileged minority imposing their will on the majority.[55]