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 ✅
DARK SIDE OF THE SWOON
Tuesday, June 9, 2026
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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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.
Netanyahu: The Corruption of Fear
The Nationalist Survivor Who Made Crisis His Kingdom
White Rose | June 2026
Benjamin Netanyahu’s career is not simply the story of a hardline Israeli politician. It is the story of a man who learned how to turn national trauma into personal power, how to wrap ambition in the flag, and how to make every accusation against him appear like an attack on the nation itself.
That is the central corruption of Netanyahuism. It is not only legal corruption, although that matters. It is moral and political corruption: the slow replacement of public service with personal survival.
Netanyahu rose by presenting himself as the indispensable guardian of Israel. He understood fear better than almost anyone in modern Israeli politics. He knew how to speak to a society surrounded by enemies, haunted by history, and permanently suspicious of betrayal. In that environment, nationalism becomes more than ideology. It becomes emotional armor. Netanyahu put that armor on and then sold himself as the only man strong enough to wear it.
His genius was never warmth, reconciliation, or statesmanship. His genius was suspicion. He turned compromise into weakness, opposition into treason, criticism into elitist sabotage, and Palestinian suffering into background noise. He did not invent Israeli nationalism, but he sharpened its ugliest edges and made them politically profitable.
That is why his rise cannot be separated from the collapse of the peace process. Netanyahu built power by opposing the Oslo spirit, by warning that concessions would bring disaster, and by positioning himself against leaders who still believed Israel’s security might require political settlement. He understood that fear is easier to campaign on than peace. Peace asks people to imagine. Fear only asks them to remember.
Over time, Netanyahu became less a prime minister than a system of survival. Every crisis became proof that he was needed. Every scandal became proof that he was persecuted. Every court case became a conspiracy. Every enemy became useful.
The corruption charges against him are not some minor footnote. Netanyahu has faced charges of bribery, fraud, and breach of trust in multiple cases known as Cases 1000, 2000, and 4000. He denies wrongdoing, but the political meaning is already clear: a sitting leader under serious criminal accusation continued to reshape the state while portraying the legal system as an enemy. That is not normal democratic tension. That is the authoritarian instinct in a suit.
His attempted judicial overhaul exposed the deeper danger. A leader facing corruption charges presided over a coalition that sought to weaken the very institutions capable of restraining government power. Supporters called it reform. Critics saw something much darker: a personal and ideological assault on judicial independence. Israel’s internal battle over the courts became a battle over whether Netanyahu’s survival would outweigh the health of Israeli democracy.
That is where Netanyahu resembles other nationalist strongmen. The pattern is familiar. First, claim to embody the nation. Then claim that courts, journalists, protesters, and opposition parties are attacking not you personally, but the people themselves. Then use the people’s fear to protect your own power. It is an old trick, but old tricks work because human fear is older than democracy.
Netanyahu’s alliance with Israel’s far right made the bargain even uglier. To remain in power, he empowered extremists who pulled the state further toward annexationist, anti-liberal, and openly supremacist politics. The result was not strength. It was rot with a flag pin on its lapel.
The tragedy is that Netanyahu’s career has helped make Israel less secure while constantly speaking the language of security. Permanent occupation, endless war, deepening isolation, internal democratic crisis, and dependence on escalating force are not signs of a successful security doctrine. They are signs of a nation trapped by leaders who cannot imagine political courage because conflict keeps them alive.
Netanyahu did not merely exploit Israeli fear. He became dependent on it.
That is the harsh truth. His political survival has required a country forever on edge, forever suspicious, forever mobilized against enemies both real and exaggerated. He has treated national emergency not as a burden to resolve, but as a climate in which he thrives.
This is why Netanyahu should be judged not only by elections won or military operations ordered, but by the condition of the society he leaves behind. More divided. More militarized. More isolated. More tolerant of extremism. More suspicious of its own democratic institutions. More chained to a future of permanent conflict.
That is not leadership. That is political arson.
Netanyahu’s defenders will say he protected Israel. The harder question is what kind of Israel he protected, and what he was willing to destroy in the process.
A leader can love power so much that he convinces himself it is patriotism. Netanyahu’s career is what happens when that confusion becomes a national operating system.
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This broke SIX HOURS AGO. Published TODAY — June 8, 2026. From The Guardian — one of the most respected newspapers in the world. Confirmed by Tom’s Hardware. Using satellite drought data from the U.S. government itself.
And what the data shows will make every American who has ever worried about water — for their family, their farm, their future — furious beyond words.
THE NUMBER THAT CHANGES EVERYTHING
About two-thirds of the 809 data centers planned across the United States are slated for land that has been in drought over the past year, an analysis from The Guardian found this week. 
Two-thirds. Of 809 planned data centers. On drought land.
Not land that might experience drought someday. Not land that is drought-adjacent. Land that has been in active drought conditions for the past 12 months.
And on that land — companies are planning to build facilities that consume between 3 and 5 million gallons of water every single day. For cooling. That evaporates. And never comes back.
New water-demand analysis puts data center cooling at roughly 4% of AI’s total water footprint — with semiconductor fabrication plants and power generation taking the rest. The combined water impact of the entire AI supply chain — from chip manufacturing to power generation to cooling — represents one of the largest new industrial water demands in American history. 
4% just for the data centers themselves. The remaining 96% comes from the power plants feeding them and the chip factories making their processors. All of it — every percentage point — drawing from aquifers and rivers and reservoirs that are already running dry.
WHERE EXACTLY ARE THESE DROUGHT-ZONE DATA CENTERS BEING BUILT?
The Guardian’s analysis — confirmed by satellite data from the U.S. Drought Monitor — reveals a pattern so alarming it is hard to believe it is legal.
The states with the most planned data center construction in active drought zones include Texas — which just became the world’s number one data center market. Arizona — where groundwater depletion has been declared a crisis. Nevada — where the Colorado River compact is already broken. Utah — where Kevin O’Leary’s Stratos Project proposes to consume more electricity than the entire state uses. New Mexico — where communities have been fighting water scarcity for decades. Colorado — where the Front Range is already facing water allocation battles that have gone to the Supreme Court.
Every one of those states. Building data centers. On drought land. Right now.
When you purchase through links on our site, we may earn an affiliate commission. The analysis found that the concentration of planned data center development in drought-affected regions represents a fundamental collision between AI’s insatiable need for water and the physical reality of where that water no longer reliably exists. 
A fundamental collision. Those are the words The Guardian used. Between AI’s water needs and physical reality.
Not a policy disagreement. Not a regulatory question. A fundamental collision with physical reality.
Let us make this concrete with real numbers from the most water-stressed states.
In Arizona — the state is on the verge of reaching its limits for water allocation. Phoenix has been told by the federal government that its Colorado River allocation will be cut. And the Sonoran Desert aquifers that have supplied Arizona’s growth for 50 years are being drawn down faster than they can recharge. Yet Arizona has 86 new data centers planned — more than most countries on Earth. 
In Texas — new data centers are straining electricity supplies across the region — pushing up prices and fueling a political backlash. But it is not just electricity that Texas data centers consume. The Edwards Aquifer — which supplies drinking water to San Antonio and surrounding communities — is already under severe stress. And the Ogallala Aquifer — which irrigates the farms that feed America — is being depleted at a rate that scientists say is irreversible within decades. 
In Nevada — where the Colorado River compact that supplies water to 40 million Americans is already in crisis — companies are building data centers that will draw from the same overtaxed Colorado River system. In some cases competing directly with the water rights of cities like Las Vegas that have spent decades and billions of dollars securing their share of a river that no longer has enough water for everyone who depends on it.
AND THE FARMERS ARE LOSING THE WATER WARS — TO AI
This is the human story behind the satellite data. The story that The Guardian found when it went beyond the numbers and talked to the people living in these drought zones.
Every gallon of water that evaporates from a data center cooling tower is a gallon that does not flow into the irrigation ditch that a fourth-generation Arizona cotton farmer needs to keep his crops alive. Every million gallons a day that a Texas hyperscale facility draws from the Edwards Aquifer is a million gallons that does not fill the San Antonio reservoir that families depend on for drinking water.
The water does not multiply. It does not appear because a tech company needs it. It is a fixed resource. Being divided between the communities that have always depended on it and the AI industry that just arrived and needs it desperately.
And right now — the AI industry has more money, more lawyers, and more political influence than any farmer or community water district. Which means in most drought-zone states — the AI industry is winning the water wars. Quietly. With permits. Before most people know the fight is happening.
809 PLANNED DATA CENTERS — THE NUMBER NOBODY IN BIG TECH WANTED PUBLISHED
The Guardian’s analysis identified 809 data centers planned across the United States. Approximately two-thirds — roughly 540 facilities — are slated for land that has been in active drought conditions over the past year. 
540 facilities. On drought land. With a combined water consumption that researchers say could reach tens of billions of gallons per day at full buildout.
For context: the entire city of Los Angeles — population 4 million — uses approximately 580 million gallons of water per day. The planned data centers in drought zones alone could consume water equivalent to dozens of cities the size of Los Angeles.
From aquifers and rivers that are already running dry.
AND CONGRESS HAS NO PLAN — BECAUSE NOBODY ASKED FOR ONE
Here is the detail that should outrage every American who votes:
There is no federal water allocation framework for AI data centers. No federal requirement for water impact assessments before a permit is issued. No federal law limiting where data centers can be built based on drought conditions. No federal agency responsible for ensuring that AI’s water consumption does not destroy the water security of existing communities.
The decisions are made at the state level. By state water boards. By county commissions. By city councils. The same bodies that — as The Guardian, NBC News, and the Washington Post have all documented this week — are only now realizing they have no rules in place.
Nashville just discovered it has 27 data centers and zero zoning rules. DeKalb County just extended a moratorium because it has no framework for evaluating water impacts. New York just passed a freeze specifically to create the space to develop rules that do not yet exist.
540 facilities. Being planned on drought land. Without a single federal water protection in place.
Here is the complete truth that The Guardian confirmed this morning with satellite data:
The AI boom — the revolution that was supposed to make everything smarter, faster, and better — is being built on some of the driest land in America. By companies that need water the way they need electricity — in quantities that dwarf any previous industrial demand. On aquifers and rivers that are already in crisis. In communities that were never asked whether they could spare the water.
Two-thirds of every data center planned for America right now is going up on drought land.
That is not a statistic. That is a verdict on a decade of decisions made without asking the communities that will live with the consequences.
The farmer in Arizona whose irrigation water disappears. The family in Nevada whose Colorado River allocation gets cut. The city in Texas whose aquifer drops another foot this summer. The community in Utah that watched Kevin O’Leary propose to consume more electricity than their entire state — on land that has been in drought for a year.
They all live in the same place. They are all looking at the same satellite map. They are all asking the same question:
Who decided this was okay?
FOLLOW this page — this story broke SIX HOURS AGO and we are already covering it. We cover data center news the moment it breaks — not the day after everyone else has moved on. Follow us and be the first to know what comes next.
SOURCES:
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)
The Guardian — Two-Thirds of Planned U.S. Data Centers Are on Drought Land, Analysis Finds (June 8, 2026)
U.S. Drought Monitor — National Drought Conditions Map (Current, drought.gov)
Bloomberg — AI Data Center Boom Risks Breakup of Biggest US Power Grid Operator (June 4, 2026)
Washington Post — Why Most Politicians Are Not Calling for Data Center Bans Despite Voters’ Anger (June 7, 2026)
Tom’s Hardware — Half of Planned US Data Center Builds Have Been Delayed or Canceled (April 2026)
Fortune — Communities Are Blocking Billions in Data Centers. Big Tech Has Wagered $1 Trillion Otherwise (May 18, 2026)
AMPAC Water Systems — AI Data Centers Draining Water: Hidden Crisis 2026 (May 5, 2026)
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Monday, June 8, 2026
CONGRESS JUST INTRODUCED A BILL CALLED THE “SHIELD ACT” — AND IT’S THE MOST IMPORTANT PIECE OF LEGISLATION REGULAR AMERICANS HAVE NEVER HEARD OF
This bill was introduced on January 14, 2026. It has not been voted on. It has not been passed. Most Americans have never heard of it.
And if Big Tech’s lobbyists get their way — most Americans never will.
But this bill — four letters, one simple idea — could do more to protect American families from the data center electricity crisis than anything else currently being proposed in Washington. And the name of what it protects against tells you everything you need to know about what is being done to you.
SHIELD. Stopping Hikes In Electricity from Large Load Demands.
THE BILL THAT PUTS THE BURDEN WHERE IT BELONGS
On January 14, 2026, Representatives Mike Levin (D-CA) and Kathy Castor (D-FL) introduced the SHIELD Act — a bill to protect families and small businesses from rising electricity bills driven by the explosive growth of data centers nationwide. The SHIELD Act would update federal utility policy to ensure that massive electricity users — not everyday ratepayers — bear the costs of the grid infrastructure they require, while incentivizing large energy consumption facilities to power their operations with zero-emission electricity. “Families should not be forced to subsidize massive energy costs for billion-dollar companies,” said Rep. Levin.
Families should not be forced to subsidize massive energy costs for billion-dollar companies.
That one sentence. That is the entire data center electricity bill crisis — solved. In 19 words.
The SHIELD Act says: Amazon, Microsoft, Google, and Meta should pay for the power plants and grid upgrades their data centers require. Not the 81-year-old widow in Hampton, Virginia. Not the family in Ohio. Not the paycheck-to-paycheck couple in Virginia Beach. Not the retiree in Maryland.
The companies whose data centers caused the demand should pay for the infrastructure the demand requires. Simple. Obvious. Just.
THE SCALE OF WHAT THE SHIELD ACT ADDRESSES
According to Data Center Watch, $64 billion in AI data center projects have already been delayed or canceled by local opposition. And yet — the data center electricity demand already built and operating is already hitting families hard. A Motley Fool analysis published yesterday found that the AI data center build out is cannibalizing $1 trillion in stock buybacks that previously supported the American stock market. A government watchdog confirmed that data centers caused a 76% electricity price spike in the PJM grid region — and that this price increase is “not reversible.”
Not reversible. The government already said those words. The price already went up. Without the SHIELD Act — or something like it — there is no mechanism to stop it from going higher.
Duke Energy in North Carolina has signed data center electricity agreements totaling potentially 25.7 gigawatts — more than triple the state’s entire current electricity demand from all other sources combined. If those data centers are all built and operating — and Duke is allowed to charge residential ratepayers for the grid upgrades required — electricity bills in North Carolina could increase by amounts that would make the Virginia situation look modest by comparison.
25.7 gigawatts. In one state. From one utility. With residential families on the hook for the bill.
Unless the SHIELD Act passes.
DEMOCRATS AND REPUBLICANS ARE BOTH PROPOSING THE SAME THING
Here is something remarkable that nobody is covering: on this issue — making data centers pay for their own electricity infrastructure — there is more bipartisan agreement in Congress than on almost any other issue.
In North Carolina, a Republican-led legislature just passed the Ratepayer Protection Act — making data centers pay their own way. In Congress, Democratic Representatives Levin and Castor introduced the SHIELD Act with the same core principle. The Trump White House has proposed that data center companies bid on 15-year contracts to build their own power plants. Republican Senator Joan Huffman in Texas said data center tax breaks are “extremely concerning and unsustainable.” Democratic Governor Josh Shapiro in Pennsylvania threatened to pull out of the PJM grid entirely over data center electricity costs.
Republicans in North Carolina. Democrats in Congress. The Trump White House. A Republican senator in Texas. A Democratic governor in Pennsylvania. All saying the same thing:
Data centers should pay for themselves. Not you.
THE BOTTOM LINE
The SHIELD Act was introduced 145 days ago. It has not been voted on. It has not been passed. It has barely been covered by mainstream media.
Meanwhile, — in those same 145 days — the PJM grid operator confirmed a 76% electricity price spike. Maryland families got a $2 billion grid upgrade bill for out-of-state data centers. The 81-year-old widow in Hampton still can’t pay her electricity bill. The Nasdaq had its worst day of the year. And Texas officially became the data center capital of the world — with its own grid operator already warning the math doesn’t add up.
The SHIELD Act is four pages of legislation that says one thing: the companies making billions from AI data centers should pay for the power plants those data centers require.
Not you. Them.
Contact your Congressman. Tell them to pass the SHIELD Act. Tell them North Carolina just showed the way. Tell them 78% of voters in a swing state agree.
Share this with everyone you know who has opened an electricity bill this year and wondered why the number keeps going up. They deserve to know a solution exists — and who is blocking it.
Follow for more data center updates
Source: Rep. Mike Levin Official Press Release — “Rep. Mike Levin Introduces New Bill to Stop Data Centers from Driving Up Electricity Prices for Consumers — The SHIELD Act” (January 14, 2026)
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