Well, I am going to respond anyway. First of all, thank you for the post and I do apologize. I should have qualified the "ignorant tag". I thought it was clearly qualified given the context of the discussion, I guess I was wrong. However, I do wish you wrote this post in the first place instead of your previous terse responses.
I think I was confused by your usage of the word "average" since average is meaningless here unless you have a large enough deployment. We are talking about Ontario, which does have a limited deployment. Now that you have clarify the context of your argument, I agree with you that more widely used wind power can alleviate the problem somewhat. However, the frequency of wind power "outages" can not be equaled to other types of power plants. No power plants have a failure rate that cause the power level to flunctuate wildly every day. Also, as I pointed out, nuclear stations, which are widely used in Ontario, are not suitable as backup for wind power. Even with wide deployment, you still have to consider the cost of power transmission over wide areas.
Therefore, within the context of Ontario power generation, I still maintain that wind power has severe disadvantages at this point. Do you agree?
Within the context of Germany, well, we are not in Germany, nor do we pay German taxes.