Wednesday, June 10, 2026

 
What a Data Center Actually Does to the Place You Live - They tell you it's just a building full of computers. Here's what they don't tell you.
AT THE FENCE LINE:
The air around a data center is not the same air you grew up breathing. These facilities require diesel backup generators by the dozens, sometimes hundreds, and those generators release fine particulate matter (PM2.5) and nitrogen oxides (NOx) that are directly linked to asthma, heart disease, and respiratory illness. We're talking 200 to 600 times more nitrogen oxides than a natural gas plant produces. (World Resources Institute) At the xAI facility in Memphis, a Time Magazine investigation found that nitrogen dioxide levels in surrounding areas measurably increased after the facility opened.
The noise never stops. Internal noise levels can reach up to 96 decibels, well above the 85 dB threshold considered harmful to human hearing. (PubMed Central) Neighbors near a Virginia facility reported 90 decibels at their homes. One resident said he can no longer open his windows. Another put mattresses against the glass to block it out.
The light runs all night, disrupting the natural circadian rhythms of the body, including melatonin production and sleep cycles. (EHP) Sleep disruption, chronic stress, hearing loss. These aren't hypotheticals. They are documented outcomes in communities that said yes before they understood what they were agreeing to.
WITHIN A MILE:
The land changes fast. The average data center site in 2024 covered about 224 acres, roughly 450 football fields, which is a 144% increase in footprint since 2022. (World Resources Institute) Farmland gone. Forests cleared. View sheds destroyed.
The water starts disappearing. A mid-sized data center uses roughly 300,000 gallons of water per day, the same as 1,000 homes. (Nixon Peabody) Between 80 and 90 percent of that comes from the same surface water and groundwater sources your tap water comes from. (Fwpcoa) Most of it evaporates in cooling towers and never returns.
Wildlife changes too. Researchers describe data centers as potential "sensory danger zones," places where light, and noise levels exceed the thresholds at which species experience measurable fitness consequences. (National Wildlife Federation) Animal communication breaks down. Migration patterns shift. Nesting fails.
MILES AWAY AND DOWNSTREAM:
The water table doesn't stop at the property line. Heavy groundwater use can deplete aquifers in ways that threaten ecosystems and long-term water availability for entire surrounding regions, not just immediate neighbors. (Water plan)
The power plants feeding these facilities pollute far beyond the data center itself. Data centers increasingly rely on large-scale plants that are now being co-located nearby to avoid grid upgrade delays. (arXiv) Whatever that plant burns, your air shed absorbs.
A September 2025 study found that air pollutants from data center operations increase rates of respiratory and cardiovascular disease, and elevate cancer risk in nearby communities. (EHP)
THIS IS PENNSYLVANIA RIGHT NOW.
From Penn Forest Township to Kline Township to Salem Township to Archbald Borough, proposals are moving. Permits are being filed. Ordinances are being written or ignored.
Folks, the research is clear, and the damage is real. The question is whether your municipality is asking the hard questions before the ground gets broken, or after.
You deserve to know what's being built next to your water, air and land.
Research via: PA Data Center Accountability / Carbon County, PA
Sources: National Wildlife Federation (Sept. 2025) · World Resources Institute (Feb. 2026) · Environmental Health Project (Feb. 2026) · PMC/Public Health Research (2025) · Science & Environmental Health Network (Aug. 2025) · Nixon Peabody/Joyce Foundation (2024) · Smithsonian Magazine (Sept. 2025)
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Elon Musk is about to become the world's first trillionaire. If it falls apart, the money in your retirement account helps pay for it. On Friday, June 12, SpaceX goes public at a valuation near $1.8 trillion, the largest stock debut in history.
As reported by More Perfect Union's Eric Gardner and broadcast on Democracy Now, the offering is engineered to do one thing: turn the paper wealth of Musk and his insiders into real cash, using ordinary Americans as the buyers.
Gardner's own words: Musk "has essentially financially engineered this IPO as a massive wealth transfer from everyday investors to insiders."
Here is how the trick works, and you do not need a finance degree to follow it.
A normal company is valued at a few times its yearly revenue. A healthy restaurant doing $3 million in sales might sell for $9 million, three times revenue. SpaceX is asking for 94 times revenue.
The Financial Times editor who looked at it called the price "nuts." Because it is.
When a price is that insane, professional investors refuse to touch it. So how do you find buyers? You reach into the retirement accounts of people who never agreed to anything.
Roughly a third of all American stock is tied to index funds, the safe, passive funds inside most 401(k)s.
When a company joins an index, every fund tracking it is forced to buy the stock automatically, not because it is a good investment, but because the rules say so. SpaceX was not eligible for the Nasdaq-100.
New companies normally wait up to a year. So this spring, according to Reuters, Musk made his decision on where to list conditional on one thing: Nasdaq fast-tracking SpaceX into its index. Nasdaq changed the rule. No regulator approved it. A former SEC official confirmed they did not have to.
That means millions of Americans are about to own SpaceX whether they want to or not. As one analyst put it, every sign points to the stock being built to spike right after it prices, then fall hard, leaving regular savers holding the loss.
And what are they buying? A rocket company that lost over $4 billion last year after Musk merged it with the money-losing remains of Twitter and his AI company, all to fund data centers in space that even his own advisers say may never work.
Insanity.
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BREAKING: O.M.G. The woman accusing Graham Platner of "intimidation" has been EXPOSED as a top Republican operative who has worked with his opponent, Susan Collins!
This is EXACTLY what they did to Al Franken…
On Thursday evening, the New York Times ran a story in which a woman, Lindsey Fifield, accused Democratic Senate candidate Graham Platner of grabbing her by the arm, twisting her arm, and of standing in a doorway menacingly blocking her exit.
The New York Times could not corroborate any of her accusations, but ran the story anyway, along with allegations from a few other women that Graham Platner could be unsettling, had dark thoughts, and generally had spooky vibes as a boyfriend.
They also spoke to several other women who said he was a lovely boyfriend, and they happily supported his candidacy.
It’s now coming out that Lindsey Fifeld is a lifelong GOP operative who has worked with Platner’s Republican opponent, Susan Collins, and successfully persuaded her to vote in favor of Brett Kavanaugh, Trump’s Supreme Court justice who is an ACTUAL rapist.
In one message to a friend, Fifeld wrote “I will personally go campaign for Collins.”
Reporter Ryan Grim at Drop Site News reports that “In 2014, Fifield began work as digital director for American Action Network, a Republican Super PAC that oversees House races. The next year she became social media manager for the Heritage Foundation, where she stayed for the next seven years.”
“In 2022, she joined the Super PAC backing Nikki Haley for president, switching to the official campaign side the next year, and staying until the campaign flamed out. She now lists herself as a visiting fellow at the Independent Women’s Forum, a prominent dark money group that is best known for helping usher Brett Kavanaugh on to the Supreme Court and giving Susan Collins the talking points she needed to make her decisive speech in his favor.“
“The NYT breezed past all this, saying she was ‘a Virginia conservative who has worked for right-leaning groups and Republican campaigns.’”
“Meanwhile, the timeline Fifield gives of their relationship is confusing, because during at least some of that time she was actually dating a different person, her long-term boyfriend who became her fiancĂ©e before she called off the wedding in 2018. We all know this because she and [Zionist extremist Bethany] Mandel did a podcast episode on it that went mega-viral in Republican circles back then.”
It should be noted as well that Lindsey Fifeld has a long history of making up baseless lies about Palestinians targeted by the Trump administration like Mahmoud Khalil and Rumeysa Ozturk.
Folks, pardon our French, but this is *bullshit.*
This is an abhorrent attempt to weaponize domestic violence and the mental trauma of dealing with PTSD in order to sink a leftist candidate who staunchly opposes the Israeli genocide of Gaza.
Oh, and if that wasn't enough, the reporter on this article is Katie Gluek, an ardent Zionist whose parents are Israeli settler-occupiers in the West Bank.
Platner’s campaign responded with “Let’s be very clear: This is a lifelong G.O.P. operative who’s dedicated her career to electing Republicans.”
What else is there to say?
Graham Platner is obviously a very imperfect person, but we are not electing him to be our boyfriend. He has been very open about his struggles with PTSD; he saw four of his squad mates killed in an IED explosion in Iraq.
This smear campaign, based on uncorroborated allegations by a woman who literally said she would work for his opponent, is part of his punishment for being a progressive who isn’t afraid to stand against Israel, to stand against the health insurance behemoths, and to demand a better life for the American people.
They managed to sink Al Franken like this. They will NOT succeed again!
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Tuesday, June 9, 2026

BlackRock quietly rewrote the housing playbook.

BlackRock didn’t grab headlines when they moved into single-family rentals. They bought homes in bulk, shifted them through internal landlords, and used the inflated repair values to push rents higher. Each step helped them secure bigger credit lines and buy even more property.

The structure let them shape comps, control valuations, and steer entire neighborhoods. It looked like simple growth, but it built a rental machine that could outpace regular buyers with ease.

This is how big players turn housing into a controlled market.


Follow @massive_thinks for more valuable content ✅

 

BREAKING THIS MORNING: THE GUARDIAN AND NOAA JUST MAPPED THE MOST ALARMING FACT IN THE ENTIRE DATA CENTER STORY — 517 OF THE 809 PLANNED FACILITIES ARE BEING BUILT ON LAND THAT IS ALREADY IN DROUGHT 

This story was published TODAY — June 8, 2026 — just hours ago.
The Guardian. Working with NOAA — the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration. The official government agency that tracks America’s weather and drought conditions. They mapped every single planned data center in the United States. All 809 of them.
And then they overlaid that map with NOAA’s official drought data.
The result is the single most alarming visual in the entire history of the data center crisis. And it proves — with government data, mapped by one of the world’s most respected newspapers — what every community in this series has been experiencing in their wells, their rivers, their reservoirs, and their fields.
Big Tech is deliberately building its water-hungry AI infrastructure in the places that have the least water to spare.
THE NUMBERS THAT WILL BREAK YOUR HEART
About two-thirds of the 809 data centers planned across the U.S. are slated for land that has been in drought over the past year, an analysis from The Guardian found — published today. The research found that 517 data centers are set to be built in areas classified as drought-stricken in the last year, according to NOAA’s National Integrated Drought Information System. 
517 out of 809. That is not a coincidence. That is not bad planning. That is a deliberate industry pattern — and the evidence has now been mapped from official government drought data for everyone to see.
A Bloomberg analysis confirmed the same pattern: more than two-thirds of new data centers built since 2022 are located in water-stressed regions — places where people are already struggling to access clean water. These aren’t isolated sites. Approximately 160 new AI-focused data centers have been built in the U.S. over the past three years — a 70% increase from the previous three-year period. “The problem has only deepened in the years since ChatGPT kicked off an AI frenzy,” Bloomberg reported. 
70% more data centers. In three years. 70% of them in drought zones. While America’s aquifers recede, its rivers run lower, and families in Indiana find their wells have gone dry.
ALABAMA: ONE DATA CENTER WOULD DRINK TWO-THIRDS OF A CITY’S WATER
Here is the story that makes this abstract map suddenly, viscerally real.
In Bessemer, Alabama — a majority-Black community with a median household income well below the national average — community opposition temporarily halted construction of a data center that was projected to require 2 million gallons of water per day. That is roughly enough to supply two-thirds of Bessemer’s entire population. One data center. Two-thirds of a city’s daily water. Gone. 
One building. Consuming enough water for two-thirds of a city. In a community that is already in a drought zone.
And in California — the state most associated with water crises in America:
Roughly 82% of data centers in California are located in communities already suffering from poor air quality — many situated in neighborhoods with particularly high levels of diesel pollution from the backup generators that run the facilities around the clock. 
82%. In California. In communities already choking on diesel exhaust. Being chosen specifically for data center development.
WHY ARE THEY DELIBERATELY CHOOSING DROUGHT ZONES?
This is the question The Guardian investigation answers — and the answer is enraging.
Two-thirds of all data centers built or in development since 2022 are located in water-stressed areas like southern Arizona, the Colorado River Basin, and Texas — the driest, most vulnerable regions in America. The reason is economics: these areas offer cheap land, cheap electricity, and business-friendly regulations that have not yet caught up to the reality of what data center water consumption means at scale for communities already stretched thin. 
Cheap land. Cheap electricity. Weak regulations. That is why they choose drought zones. Not because the water is abundant. Because the laws are weak, and the land is cheap, and the communities are poor enough that opposition is less organized.
In The Dalles, Oregon — a small town that became a cautionary tale — Google’s water use grew 316% while the town’s population grew just 12%. The math of data center water consumption in small, drought-prone communities is not sustainable. And yet the industry keeps choosing them — because they have the cheapest power and the weakest oversight. 
316%. Google’s water consumption. 12%. The town’s population growth. In Oregon. Which is already dealing with drought. And which was chosen because it had cheap hydroelectric power.
THE COLORADO RIVER IS ALREADY DYING — AND THEY’RE BUILDING MORE DATA CENTERS ON IT
The Colorado River — the lifeline of the American West, serving 40 million people across seven states and providing irrigation for the farms that grow much of America’s food — is already so depleted that Lake Mead and Lake Powell have hit record lows in recent years. And data centers are being built throughout the Colorado River Basin — in Arizona, Nevada, Utah, and Colorado — all drawing on the same water system that is already in crisis. 
40 million people. Seven states. One river. Already dying. And 517 planned data centers are going into the drought zones that include its basin.
The communities that have been fighting these facilities — in Utah, in Arizona, in Nevada — are not being alarmist. They are looking at the same NOAA drought maps that The Guardian published today. And they are saying: there is no water to spare. And the companies building these facilities know it — and are building there anyway, because the regulations haven’t caught up.
AND THE MORATORIUMS ARE SPREADING FASTER THAN EVER
The Guardian report landed this morning, and it is already accelerating the national movement.
In just the last two weeks — communities across America have enacted moratoriums at an unprecedented pace: Cedar Hill, Tennessee — two-year moratorium; McMinnville, Tennessee — 18-month moratorium; Ashwaubenon, Wisconsin — 12-month moratorium on hyperscale facilities; Augusta, Georgia — 49-day moratorium to update a 1963 zoning plan; Filer Township, Michigan — one-year precautionary moratorium; Daviess County, Kentucky — one-year moratorium; Merrillville, Indiana — one-year moratorium; Hillsborough, North Carolina — 60-day moratorium. 
Eight communities. In two weeks. From Tennessee to Wisconsin to Georgia to Michigan to Kentucky to Indiana to North Carolina.
And in November 2026 — just five months away:
Voters in California, Michigan, Nevada, and Wisconsin will decide on at least five local ballot measures related to data centers — the first time in American history that data center construction has appeared directly on voter ballots. Americans will be able to vote — directly — on whether data centers should be allowed in their communities. The data center fight has officially entered the ballot box. 
The ballot box. Five measures. Four states. November 2026.
After everything that has happened — the dry wells, the spiked bills, the shell companies, the workers killed, the Indigenous land threatened, the children harmed, the wildlife destroyed, the Nasdaq crash, the grid breaking — Americans are going to vote directly on data centers for the first time in history.
THE BOTTOM LINE
TODAY — June 8, 2026 — The Guardian and NOAA published the map that proves it all.
517 out of 809 planned data centers. Two-thirds. Being built on land that is already in drought. Measured by the official U.S. government weather agency. Mapped by one of the world’s most trusted newspapers.
They are not choosing these locations despite the drought. They are choosing them because of the cheap land and weak regulations that come with communities that haven’t yet figured out what is about to be taken from them.
Bessemer, Alabama. One data center. Two-thirds of a city’s water. Per day.
The Dalles, Oregon. Google’s water use up 316%. The town’s population up 12%.
The Colorado River. 40 million people. Seven states. Being drained from every direction.
517 more planned. In drought zones. Right now. Waiting for permits. Some with shell company names nobody has heard of yet.
But in November — for the first time — Americans in California, Michigan, Nevada, and Wisconsin will get to vote directly on whether to allow them.
And if the story of Festus, Missouri is any guide — if the story of Northern Virginia is any guide — if the story of the thousand people in Utah who chanted “Shame” is any guide:
When Americans actually get to vote on this? They vote no.
Share this TODAY. Share it everywhere. Because the map is out. The data is official. And November is coming. 
Follow for more data center updates
Source: Tom’s Hardware — “Most new U.S. AI data centers are being built in drought zones — two-thirds of 809 planned projects set for areas with water shortages” (June 8, 2026 — TODAY) See less
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 Once the challenge was fired off at Musk the entire interview blipped, crashed, then disappeared off-air... JUST LIKE THAT POOF!


Looks like the Board of Peace may have been a fraudulent cover for business deal bribes.

⛔️The Major Corruption Story behind the Albanian Island scandal‼️

⛔️ - **Summer 2021**: Jared Kushner vacations on Nat Rothschild's yacht, meeting Albanian PM Edi Rama, initiating a private project linked to the U.S. president.

⛔️- **June 2021**: Saudi Arabia's Public Investment Fund (PIF) commits $2 billion to Kushner's Affinity Partners, despite internal recommendations to reject the proposal due to Kushner's inexperience.

⛔️- **December 2024**: Qatar Investment Authority and Abu Dhabi's Lunate invest an additional $1.5 billion in Affinity, raising total assets to $4.8 billion. Kushner announces the funding round closed before the election.

⛔️- **December 8, 2024**: Bashar al-Assad's regime falls, leading to the rise of Al-Golani - AKA- Ahmed al-Sharaa's transitional government, while the Caesar Act restricts reconstruction funding.

⛔️- **December 30, 2024**: Albania grants strategic investor status to Atlantic Incubation Partners LLC, linked to Kushner, just before Trump's second inauguration.

⛔️- **May 13-14, 2025**: Trump unexpectedly announces plans to lift U.S. sanctions on Syria, meeting with al-Sharaa and MBS the following day.

⛔️- **Summer 2025**: Mohamad Al-Khayyat pitches a Syrian coastal megaproject to Congressman Joe Wilson, who suggests branding it as "Trump" to gain attention. Khayyat presents a foundation stone for "Trump International Golf Club, Syria" to Wilson.

⛔️- **August 25, 2025**: U.S. officials, including Senator Jeanne Shaheen, meet the new Syrian president, al-Sharaa, as sanctions are lifted, paving the way for Syria's recovery.

⛔️- **November 2025**: UCC Holding signs a $4 billion deal to redevelop Damascus International Airport, marking the first major reconstruction project post-sanctions.

⛔️- **December 18, 2025**: Trump signs the FY2026 NDAA, which repeals the Caesar Act, quietly removing sanctions against Syria.

⛔️- **January 21-22, 2026**: Ivanka and Kushner visit Albania, attending a working dinner with PM Rama and local business leaders.

⛔️- **January 22, 2026**: Trump hosts the Board of Peace charter signing at Davos, with Albania as a founding signatory, enhancing Rama's profile.

⛔️- **February 19, 2026**: Rama participates in the inaugural Board of Peace meeting in Washington, photographed with Trump and other officials, as Trump pledges a $10 billion contribution.

⛔️- **April 1, 2026**: Sazan Operations, the implementing company for the project, is registered in Albania, linked to the Khayyat brothers.

⛔️- **April 19, 2026**: An investigation confirms the Khayyats' partnership with Kushner, indicating that sanctions were lifted at Kushner's request to facilitate Ivanka's investment in Albania.