Saturday, June 6, 2026

This is not just about data privacy. It is about public trust.
If ordinary Americans are told that stealing, copying, or sharing someone’s Social Security information is a serious crime, then that same standard should apply when powerful people or government-linked teams are accused of mishandling sensitive data on a massive scale.
Reports and whistleblower claims have raised serious concerns about Elon Musk’s DOGE operation and its access to federal records, including Social Security data. The fear is simple but deeply alarming: if private information connected to millions of Americans was copied, moved, accessed, or shared without proper safeguards, this cannot be dismissed as a minor technical issue.
This kind of exposure can put people at risk of identity theft, financial fraud, disrupted benefits, and long-term privacy harm.
And let’s be honest. If a regular government employee walked out with private Social Security records, no one would call it “efficiency.” They would call it a scandal. There would be investigations, hearings, and demands for accountability.
So why should the reaction be different when the people involved are wealthy, politically connected, or operating under the banner of “government reform”?
That is what makes this situation so serious.
Americans did not agree to have their most sensitive personal information treated like a private experiment. Social Security numbers are not political tools. Federal databases are not playgrounds for billionaires. Privacy laws should not suddenly become flexible because someone has influence in Washington.
If people’s data was accessed or mishandled without lawful authority, a class action lawsuit may be exactly the kind of accountability needed. Because consequences should not only apply to ordinary citizens.
If the allegations are true, this is bigger than DOGE.
It is about whether powerful people can break the rules on a massive scale and still walk away untouched.
Do Americans deserve answers — and real consequences?

 



 

ELON MUSK, PETER THIEL, AND SAM ALTMAN ARE IN A THREE-WAY WAR OVER THE FUTURE OF AMERICA’S DATA CENTERS — AND YOU ARE CAUGHT IN THE MIDDLE
 
You’ve been following this series. You know about the dry wells. The trailer parks. The electricity bills. The nuclear plants. The surveillance. The dead teenager. The empty Stargate field.
But underneath all of it — beneath every single story we’ve told — there is a war happening between the most powerful men in the world. A war over who controls the data centers. Who controls the AI. Who controls the future.
And it is getting nastier, more personal, and more dangerous by the week.
Here is the war that nobody is covering completely — because to cover it completely, you have to put all the pieces together at once.
 
THE THREE KINGS FIGHTING OVER AMERICA’S AI FUTURE
 
In one corner: Sam Altman — CEO of OpenAI, the company behind ChatGPT. His vision: AI should be controlled by a nonprofit-turned-corporation that answers to humanity. He is building Stargate. He convinced Trump to stand next to him at the White House. He survived a Molotov cocktail. He is raising the largest pool of AI capital in history.
In another corner: Elon Musk — founder of xAI, owner of X, head of DOGE, the most powerful man in Washington next to the President himself. He sued OpenAI. He publicly called Altman a fraud. He is building his own AI supercomputer called Colossus — as loud as an airport, running on jet engines in a residential area of Memphis, Tennessee.
And in the third corner: Peter Thiel — the billionaire venture capitalist behind Palantir, one of the most powerful AI surveillance companies in America. He flew to Rome in March 2026 for what the Vatican described as “secretive Antichrist lectures.” He is funding politicians, shaping policy, and building a vision of AI that the Pope himself just warned about.
Trump’s relationship with Musk, Altman, and the broader Silicon Valley AI elite has become one of the most consequential political dynamics in American history — three men with radically different visions of what AI should be, all competing for the President’s ear, his executive orders, and access to the federal contracts, data, and regulatory decisions that will determine who wins the AI race.
 
THE MUSK-ALTMAN WAR THAT SHUT DOWN GOVERNMENT
 
Elon Musk and Sam Altman were once friends and co-founders of OpenAI. Now they are engaged in one of the most bitter corporate feuds in American history. Musk sued OpenAI, alleging the company betrayed its founding mission to benefit humanity. Altman fired back publicly. Musk used his position inside the Trump administration — as head of DOGE — to attempt to use the Department of Justice to block OpenAI’s conversion to a for-profit company, a move that would have been worth billions to Altman personally.
 
The head of DOGE. Using the Justice Department. To try to destroy a competitor’s company. While both men are building competing data centers that will consume the electricity of millions of Americans.
Meanwhile, Musk’s own data centers — built for his xAI company — have been at the center of multiple controversies. His “Colossus” AI supercomputer in Memphis, Tennessee used 30 mobile gas turbines — essentially jet engines — to power the facility, creating noise levels comparable to an active airport in a residential neighborhood. Memphis residents filed complaints. Environmental groups sued. And Musk used his proximity to the Trump White House to fast-track permits that would normally have taken years. 
Jet engines. In a neighborhood. Fast-tracked by a man who runs the government’s efficiency department. Building a competitor to the company he tried to destroy using the Justice Department.
 
PETER THIEL AND THE “ANTICHRIST LECTURES” AT THE VATICAN
 
In March 2026 — the same month the Vatican was finalizing the Pope’s historic AI encyclical — Peter Thiel traveled to Rome for what the Vatican described as “secretive Antichrist lectures.” Thiel, a known contrarian and Christian nationalist philosopher, has long argued that AI represents an existential force that will either save or destroy Western civilization — and that the stakes are so high that conventional moral guardrails should not apply. 
Peter Thiel. At the Vatican. Giving secret lectures about the Antichrist. While the Pope was writing an encyclical warning that AI was becoming a new Tower of Babel.
 
Thiel’s company — Palantir — now has formal contracts with the Pentagon to process classified intelligence using AI. His vision of AI as a tool of geopolitical and military dominance is precisely what Pope Leo XIV condemned in Magnifica Humanitas when he warned against “an ‘armed’ logic of competition driven by the pursuit of geopolitical and commercial dominance.” The Pope issued that warning eleven days after Thiel’s Rome visit. 
The Pope issued his most important document eleven days after Peter Thiel gave secret lectures at the Vatican about AI and the Antichrist. The timing is not a coincidence. The Pope was responding to exactly what he saw and heard.
 
AND TRUMP IS PLAYING ALL THREE — AND AMERICA IS THE PRIZE
 
Trump signed Executive Order 14318 on July 23, 2025 — titled “Accelerating Federal Permitting of Data Center Infrastructure” — specifically designed to override local community opposition and fast-track data center construction across America. The order allows federal authorities to bypass local zoning laws, environmental reviews, and community input processes that would normally slow or stop data center construction.
 
When your community voted no on a data center — and construction started anyway — this is why. A presidential executive order was specifically written to make your vote not matter.
The data center backlash has become a major political flashpoint ahead of the 2026 midterm elections. In Pennsylvania, Republican incumbents who supported data center development are now facing serious electoral challenges from voters who are furious about electricity bills and community impacts. Democrats who won governor’s races in New Jersey and Virginia specifically ran on data center accountability. Both parties are now scrambling to figure out which side of this issue wins votes.
 
Musk vs Altman. Thiel at the Vatican. Trump overriding community votes. Pennsylvania Republicans running scared. Virginia governors elected on data center anger.
 
This is not a tech story anymore. This is a power struggle — the largest and most consequential fight over who controls the future of America — playing out in data center zoning meetings, White House briefings, Vatican conference rooms, and Memphis neighborhood associations simultaneously.
And at the center of it all — paying the electricity bills, drinking the drained water, breathing the diesel exhaust, watching their wells run dry — are the 330 million Americans who were never invited to the table.
 
THE BOTTOM LINE
 
Three men. Each worth hundreds of billions of dollars. Each with the ear of the most powerful government on Earth. Each building competing data centers. Each fighting to control what AI becomes. Each willing to use every tool available — lawsuits, executive orders, secret Vatican lectures, government contracts, military partnerships — to win.
 
Sam Altman survived a Molotov cocktail.
 
Elon Musk is running the government’s efficiency department while building a competitor to the company he sued.
 
Peter Thiel is giving secret Antichrist lectures at the Vatican while his company processes your classified data for the Pentagon.
And the rest of America is getting the bill.
 
Share this. Because understanding who is actually fighting over your water, your electricity, your privacy, and your future is the first step to taking it back.
 
Follow for more data center updates
 
Source: Fortune — “Communities are blocking billions in data centers. Big Tech has wagered $1 trillion otherwise.” (May 18, 2026)
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Friday, June 5, 2026

BREAKING: Whistleblower reveals Trump officials and DOGE bros tried declaring 2.7 MILLION living people "dead" in Social Security records to drive them out of the country as part of Trump's immigration crackdown!
According to a former senior Social Security Administration whistleblower, the plan would have used one of the federal government's most powerful databases to effectively erase living people from the financial system. The allegations were revealed by the WaPo this morning.
Whistleblower Jeremiah Schofield, says DOGE officials arrived at Social Security in early 2025 and quickly gained access to some of the agency's most sensitive data systems. He recalled seeing DOGE personnel discussing databases that few government employees were normally allowed to access.
Then things allegedly took a darker turn. Schofield said a DOGE official working with the Department of Homeland Security described a plan to place as many as 2.7 million people into Social Security's “Death Master File,” a database used by banks, employers and government agencies to determine whether someone is alive.
Anyone falsely placed in that file would lose access to wages, bank accounts, credit, benefits and other essential services because the system effectively treats them as dead.
Schofield says he reviewed a sample of names from the list and discovered the people were alive. The sample included U.S. citizens, lawful permanent residents, teenagers and senior citizens, including a widow legally receiving survivor benefits.
Agency lawyers warned that falsely marking living people as dead could violate federal law, and he refused to help implement the plan.
Schofield said he was shocked by discussions that indicated the goal was to make immigrants so miserable financially that they would self-deport or seek help from government offices where they could potentially be detained.
The Social Security Administration says the larger 2.7 million-person effort was never carried out. But Schofield alleges a smaller operation involving roughly 6,100 people was implemented, with some later forced to prove they were still alive in order to restore their records.
In short, the plan was to use government databases to make living people disappear from the financial system. If Schofield's allegations are true, DOGE wasn't just hunting for waste and fraud. It was helping build a bureaucratic blacklist.
Add this to the many crimes perpetrated by DOGE that have already come to light. Justice must be served against their wholesale ransacking of some of the U.S. government's most sensitive data.
If you agree, like and share this post.


 

Marco Rubio before congress:
"I do think you are going to see a reshifting of where the world gets its energy from in the aftermath of this conflict. You are already beginning to see some of it now. I think you are going to see the United States will be a bigger energy provider to the indo pacific. We have the capability to do so, but it's going to take some time to build that capability, so I think you are going to see more of that. I think you are going to see the establishment of more of these alternative routes as a result of this. Remember, only about 20% of global oil goes through the straits of Hormuz, but it is about 80 to 85% of the oil that goes to the indo Pacific. So in those particular countries, I think you are going to most definitely see them buying more from other places including the United States."
Scott Perry replied:
"And that is going to lower the cost for everybody, which is great."
Here's some clarity for the confused Liberals:
· The US intends to become a bigger energy provider to the Indo‑Pacific. That is not “free trade.” That is a strategic push to replace Middle Eastern oil with US LNG, locking Asian countries into dependence on American energy.
· The Strait of Hormuz is the choke point. Rubio notes that 80‑85% of oil going to the Indo‑Pacific passes through Hormuz. The current conflict has disrupted that flow – by design. The US is not trying to “reopen” the strait; it is trying to replace it.
· This will take time. The US needs to build export terminals, shipping capacity, and long‑term contracts. That is why the war is not ending soon. The longer the strait remains unstable, the more Asian buyers will turn to US suppliers.
What Perry added (and why it is a lie)
Perry says: “And that is going to lower the cost for everybody, which is great.”
This is pure propaganda. US LNG is more expensive than Middle Eastern oil and Russian gas. The only way US exports become “cheap” for Asian buyers is if their other options are destroyed – by sanctions, blockade, or war. The “lower cost” is not a market outcome; it is the result of armed coercion.
Perry is either lying or repeating a talking point he knows is false. The real effect will be higher energy prices for everyone except US producers.
1. The US energy monopoly strategy is not a secret conspiracy. It is stated openly by senators like Rubio. The goal is to “reshift” global energy supply away from the Middle East and Russia and toward the US – using military force to destroy competing suppliers.
2. The Indo‑Pacific is the primary target. Rubio explicitly says the US wants to supply energy to that region. That is where China, Japan, South Korea, India, and Vietnam are located. The real goal is to force Asian economies to depend on US energy – and to use that dependency as leverage against China.
3. The war will not end until the new energy architecture is in place. Rubio says it “will take some time to build that capability.” That means the conflict will continue. The strait will remain dangerous. European and Asian buyers will be pushed toward US LNG. The “deal” with Iran is a distraction. The real deal is between the US energy sector and the US government.
4. Perry’s “lower cost” claim is a lie. The truth is that US energy companies are profiting from war – and ordinary people are paying the price.

 

BREAKING : 🇺🇸 California’s first-ever anti-data center ballot measure is shaping up to be an absolute shellacking for the tech industry — part of a wave of opposition rising across the country, as communities and lawmakers grapple with the frenzied push to build AI infrastructure.
Monterey Park, a city of 60,000 people about 10 miles east of downtown Los Angeles, placed a measure on Tuesday’s ballot asking voters if they wanted to prohibit data centers in their city. The response, so far, has been an unequivocal “yes,” with 86 percent of votes counted as of Wednesday afternoon in favor of the proposal.
Local officials and environmental organizers said they hope the drubbing will spur other cities to enact similar bans.
“A lot of the other cities that are facing data center proposals are going to follow suit,” Elizabeth Yang, the city’s mayor, said on Tuesday. “There’s [a] bad reputation across the board, across the country, from other data centers that have been built in neighborhoods.”
California is one of many states experiencing an explosion of developer interest in constructing new data centers, which house the physical infrastructure that make up the backbone of the internet.
Tech companies racing to develop artificial intelligence models need the computing power stored in these facilities. But the seemingly endless rows of servers and other equipment that fill their floors use immense amounts of electricity and water, which has made them controversial, and sparked backlash and protests.
The Monterey Park vote represents an extension of that resistance in California, and serves as a successful test of a new model for anti-data center activists.
The text of the city’s measure stated that its aim was to “protect air quality, drinking water resources and public health” and prevent increases to residents’ electricity and water rates, and it came about in response to community uproar over a now-abandoned proposal to build a data center in the city.
Monterey Park is believed to be only the second city in the nation to pass an anti-data center referendum, following an April vote in a small Milwaukee suburb (the Data Center Coalition, an industry association, is not aware of any other measures, it told POLITICO). The upswell in opposition has been all the more notable coming in Silicon Valley’s own state, which is an important market for data centers.
“The data center industry will continue to work with California residents, communities, and policymakers to support the responsible development of this critical infrastructure and ensure California remains competitive in the modern economy,” Khara Boender, director of state policy for the Data Center Coalition, said in a statement ahead of the vote.
The result in Monterey Park was a rare piece of bright news for environmental advocates in the state, who suffered a series of setbacks during Tuesday’s primary.
Green groups’ gubernatorial favorite, billionaire climate activist Tom Steyer, trailed both establishment Democratic pick Xavier Becerra and Republican Steve Hilton in initial results. And a slew of progressive down ballot candidates appeared poised to lose to opponents supported by the fossil fuel industry.
Other organizers across the nation have signaled an eagerness to embrace plans similar to the one in Monterey Park, which aim to counter the breakneck race to build infrastructure to support the artificial intelligence boom. That includes a campaign to put a ban on the ballot statewide in Ohio, and local efforts in Georgia, Maryland and Utah.
“What we’re seeing in Monterey Park can be an early step in this being replicated in other parts of the country,” Andrea Vega, a Southern California organizer with environmental group Food & Water Watch, said in an interview.
But Boender warned that there’s a downside to barring data centers from a community.
The Monterey Park ballot measure would “send a signal that the area is closed for business, both for data centers and for other significant economic development projects,” depriving the region of “jobs and investment,” Boender said ahead of the vote.
But voters split with tech interests during Tuesday’s primary, handing the industry a series of electoral losses.
Meanwhile, other states are grappling with how to respond to the massive AI infrastructure buildout in their own rural communities and cities. On Tuesday, the New York Legislature appeared poised to move forward with a one-year moratorium on new large-scale data centers.
Local activists began pushing for a data center ban in Monterey Park after plans by Australian developer DigiCo Infrastructure REIT surfaced to build one in the city. Opponents voiced concerns about how much electricity and water data centers require, and the potential for diesel backup generators to cause air pollution.
“We don’t want any of them to be built in our area,” Amy J. Wong, a volunteer organizer with the group San Gabriel Valley Progressive Action, said in an interview.
The organizers pressured the city council to implement a data center moratorium and place the referendum on Tuesday’s ballot. Following the city council action, the developer, which did not respond to a request for comment, withdrew its proposal.
Data center opponents in Los Angeles County have scored a series of wins in other small cities around Monterey Park, with city councils enacting their own data center moratoriums in recent months. The nearby City of Industry could be next, according to Wong.
That coming fight is the reason why the Monterey Park vote was significant, she said. “It can send a strong message to neighboring cities and other cities in California, and also across the nation.”
California Gov. Gavin Newsom’s office did not immediately respond to a request for comment on the Monterey Park vote.
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Thursday, June 4, 2026

This story will make your blood boil. And it happened right here in America just weeks ago.
Residents in Fayette County, Georgia, were told by their local government to stop watering their lawns. Water pressure in their homes was dropping. People couldn’t shower properly. Something was draining the town dry.
So they started investigating. And what they found will shock you.
A massive data center campus located about 20 miles south of Atlanta had been secretly drawing approximately 29 million gallons of water through two water connections that the county didn’t even know existed — and this went on for 15 months before anyone caught it. 
15 MONTHS. Hidden pipes. Millions of gallons. While regular families were being told to stop watering their grass.
Now here’s the part that will really get you angry —
Officials refused to fine the builders of the massive 6.2 million-square-foot facility over the unauthorized water use. The county’s soft response was attributed to the data center being described as “our largest customer, and we have to be partners.” 
So let’s get this straight. A tech company secretly taps into your water supply without permission, drains 29 million gallons while your water pressure tanks, and the punishment is… nothing. Because they’re a “partner.”
💧 This Is Not an Isolated Incident
This is happening all across America right now.
Data centers powering AI systems consumed approximately 17 billion gallons of water in 2023, and that number is projected to explode to 68 billion gallons by 2028 — a 300% increase in just five years. 
On average, a single medium-sized data center consumes roughly 110 million gallons of water per year — enough to cover the annual water use of about 1,000 households. 
And they’re building thousands of these things. Everywhere.
Many AI data centers are deliberately built in the country’s driest regions to take advantage of cheap solar power — placing enormous strain on water supplies in areas least equipped to handle the extra demand. 
🔥 Every Time You Use ChatGPT, This Happens
Training a single large AI model like GPT-4 consumed approximately 700,000 liters of water for cooling. And generating just 10–50 AI responses consumes roughly 500 milliliters — about one water bottle. 
Scale that to billions of daily users across every AI platform in the world, and you start to understand just how massive this crisis really is.
😡 Who Pays the Price?
Not the billionaires building these facilities.
Water costs are expected to rise dramatically across affected regions in 2026 as AI consumption spikes. Businesses and consumers nationwide should expect to pay significantly more for water as data centers compete for the same limited resources. 
Regular Americans — farmers, families, small businesses — are already feeling it. The Georgia story is just one example of what’s quietly happening in communities nationwide while the tech giants write the checks and the politicians look the other way.
Georgia families were told to stop watering their lawns. A $10 billion data center was secretly draining their water. And nobody got fined.
This is the AI boom nobody is talking about. Share this before it gets buried. 👇💧 drop a follow for more data center news👌
📌 Source: Tom’s Hardware — “AI data center project secretly sucked 29 million gallons of water over 15 months before detected by residents” (May 10, 2026)