Historic WH Treaty Room To Become Guest Bedroom

tRump treats the White House the official residence and working office of the president.ย  The longest any resident may live there is normally 8 years or 10 years if the vice president takes over after 2 years of the president’s term. A federal judge told tRump’s administration that he was only holding the White House in trust for the people and next person to hold the office.ย  It did not give him the right to change it or do what he wanted with it as if it was Mar-a-Lago or one of his other properties.ย  That judge ordered a stop to the ballroom until congress authorized it, which the people do not want at a time when all their social services are being cut.ย  tRump is deluded into thinking the more gold in a room the fancier and wealthier the person seems.ย  He is trying to keep up with other dictators palaces. Now he is talking about replacing the front of the white house, the iconic columns.ย  It is almost like he thinks he won’t be leaving. And that every other president will share his clearly in his mind superior tastes in decorating. However most people will see it as tacky and pretentious, which both describe tRump.ย  Hugs


Historic WH Treaty Room To Become Guest Bedroom

Theย New York Timesย reports:

President Trump has discussed turning the White House Treaty Room, historically a meeting place for diplomats and statesmen, into a guest bedroom with an en suite bath.ย He has added gold flourishes to the East Room of the Executive Residence in a style similar to the gilded trimmings he installed in the Oval Office. And he has affixed โ€œchallenge coinsโ€ that celebrate his presidency โ€” including the newest medallions in red and gold โ€” to the walls inside the West Wing.

The Treaty Room is one of the most historic rooms in the White House.ย ย Presidents Ulysses S. Grant and William McKinley used it as a Cabinet room, and it was where the Spanish-American War peace protocol of 1898, and the nuclear test ban treaty of 1963, were signed. Once known as the โ€œMonroe Room,โ€ because it was where President James Monroe worked, it also has been the setting for major wartime addresses by presidents George W. Bush and Joseph R. Biden Jr.

Read theย full article.

The sharply conservative Supreme Court that Trump's three appointees remade is the first since at least the 1950s to reject civil rights claims in a majority of cases involving women and minorities, according to a detailed analysis conducted for The Washington Post.

Kyle Griffin (@kylegriffin1.bsky.social) 2026-04-10T00:41:21.736Z

https://youtu.be/mPuQEG19BIM

 

CDC Mulls Plan To Classify COVID Vaccine โ€œInjuriesโ€

*** Personal Note.ย  By Monday things here should be back to normal.ย  Ron will be in Texas driving his sister home.ย  I will have had the weekend to rest.ย  Ron is on his last full day of doing no exertion not even house work.ย  They went into a major artery in his wrist.ย  He had a wrist board to keep the wrist from flexing for 24 hours, shower lightly but leave the large bandaid on.ย  Change the bandaid after showering for 72 hours.ย  Call 911 if it starts to bleed.ย  On Saturday morning he is off restrictions and flies to Texas. Then he and his sister will drive to Florida.ย  She will stay with us for a few days as her house here is emptied and then she will settle her stuff and go to New Hampshire.ย  She is flying up there. Hugs ****ย 

CDC Mulls Plan To Classify COVID Vaccine “Injuries”

 

Axiosย reports:

Trump administration health officials are giving serious consideration to a plan that would make injuries from COVID-19 vaccines a formal diagnosis that can be coded in medical records. Increasing documentation of whatโ€™s still a loosely defined condition could help lay the groundwork for future lawsuits against vaccine manufacturers.

The ICD-10 system already covers general vaccine injuries and reactions to some specific vaccines, but it doesnโ€™t have a designation for the COVID shot, whose safety has become a major point of contention within the administration.

The new code could allow providers โ€œto identify, track, and study patients who experience adverse effects specifically related to COVID vaccines,โ€ Mary Stanfill, a CDC health information specialist, said during a public meeting on code proposals last week.

Read theย full article. You will recall that the cult has claimed that COVID vaccines cause the human body to become literally magnetic, and that they cause โ€œturbo cancer,โ€ autism, miscarriages, myocarditis, pericarditis, hearing loss, and taste loss. Oh, and the vaccines also supposedly contain graphene nanobots meant to connect people to the internet for the purpose of mind control.

Staying Safe Online

A ‘Self-Doxing’ Rave Helps Trans People Stay Safe Online

Janus Rose ยทApr 8, 2026 at 10:18 AM

At a New York party, attendees spent Trans Day of Visibility dancing, DJing, and learning how to become less visible online.

Imani Thompson, digital security trainer and organizer of the event / Photo by Janus Rose

Itโ€™s Trans Day of Visibility, and Iโ€™m at an event space in the heart of New York Cityโ€™s Commie Corridor to learn how to become less visible online.

The crowd gathered at the aptly-named Trans Pecos in Ridgewood, Queens is here for โ€œ404: Deadname Not Found,โ€ a digital self-defense workshop which promises to teach trans people how to find and remove their sensitive personal information from the internet (and which also has no relation to this website). The vibe is giving OpSec rave happy hourโ€”attendees sip colorful drinks, groove to DJ sets, and huddle around laptops using online tools to track down their own digital footprints.

The goal of the exercise is to find holes in your digital defenses, a practice cybersecurity folks call โ€œred-teaming.โ€ A slide deck guides participants through this โ€œself-doxingโ€ ritual, instructing them to use websites like IntelBase, PimEyes, and haveibeenpwned to find addresses, selfies, passwords, old names and aliases, and other personal info that might have been left sitting around on the open internet.

It makes for great cocktail party banter. One participant raises their arms in triumph upon receiving a clean bill of health while checking if their information was leaked in a data breach. Others swivel laptop screens and compare notes on the various places their digital detritus had cropped up. In my case, I was lucky: I mostly found data brokers with incorrect information, a long-forgotten MySpace page, and a woman whose spam calls Iโ€™ve been receiving for the past 10 years. Finally, participants are directed to various pages where they can request data to be removed, or sign up for discounted services like Kanary and DeleteMe that do the removals on your behalf.

Behind the fun and light atmosphere, everyone here knows the unspoken reality that drives tonightโ€™s activities: an unrelenting wave of discriminatory bills and executive orders that are rapidly demolishing trans rights across the US. โ€œTrans Visibilityโ€ is a nice idea, but it turns out it really sucks to be visible in a fascist surveillance state where the highest levels of government are obsessively trying to destroy your ability to live.

โ€œIn this world of hyper-surveillance, I want to make sure all my stuff is safe and that no one is trying to harvest my data for anything,โ€ Anna, a workshop participant, told 404 Media. Anna asked to use a pseudonym to protect her identity, which is not surprising given that the goal of the workshop is to make it harder to be doxed. โ€œEspecially now that thereโ€™s lots of incentives for the federal government to get into that business, I just wanna make sure all of that is under wraps.โ€

Like the eventโ€™s name suggests, many attendees are looking for traces of their โ€œdeadnames,โ€ which is how some trans folks refer to the names they were given pre-transition. Trans people face a disproportionately high risk of being doxed online, and deadnames and other sensitive info are frequently dug up on right-wing hate forums like KiwiFarms and social media sites like Elon Muskโ€™s X, where harassment campaigns and hate speech are allowed and even encouraged.

โ€œWe have to protect ourselves,โ€ said Ryan, who also used a pseudonym. โ€œItโ€™s great to know how to find stuff like this, because you never know whatโ€™s still out there.โ€

Imani Thompson, a digital security trainer who organized the event as part of her series Cache Me Outside, says she started hosting the free workshops at queer bars in Brooklyn a year ago, after noticing trans and intersex friends who were noticeably shaken by the opening salvos of the second Trump administration.

โ€œI hadn’t seen cybersecurity events that looked like they would attract or resonate with the crowds I felt needed this information the most,โ€ she told 404 Media. โ€œI wanted to make this fun and un-intimidating and doing digital security training at the bar is kind of silly and fun and gives us a built-in VPN and protection from sensitive convos being recorded.โ€

There are specific reasons many trans people are anxious about their personal data and online presence these days. For one, trans identities often donโ€™t fit neatly into government boxes, and the name and gender they are assigned at birth may or may not match their government-issued IDs. Recently, a new law in Kansas resulted in hundreds of trans people being told that their drivers licenses and IDs had been invalidated overnight, forcing them to obtain new documents that revert to the sex marker assigned at birth. Journalist Marissa Kabas later reported that the 300 trans IDs in question had been flagged and not immediately invalidated, but the goal of the law and its ensuing chaos was clear: requiring trans people to have IDs that donโ€™t match their appearance or lived reality, forcing them to out themselves and introducing friction and discrimination into their everyday lives.

The same Kansas law also implemented the first state-level โ€œbathroom bounty,โ€ making it a crime for trans people to use appropriate bathrooms and changing rooms and promising rewards to random passersby who feel โ€œaggrievedโ€ by someone they think might be trans. Lawmakers in Idaho have passed an even harsher bill, which would charge repeat trans bathroom-users with a felony and up to 5 years of jail time. These bills threaten not only trans people, but anyone whose appearance might fall outside of someoneโ€™s normative expectations of โ€œmaleโ€ and โ€œfemale.โ€ And they are especially dangerous at a time when facial recognition can near-instantly identify someone with a quick search.

Thompson also worries about the information that queer folks can reveal while asking for help online. Trans people experience unemployment, housing insecurity, and violence at exponentially higher rates than cis people, and itโ€™s not uncommon to see Gofundme pages and Venmo accounts flooding social media feeds. These posts will sometimes include personal details like a personโ€™s name, face, transition status, location, immigration status, and even how much they have in their bank accountโ€”great for getting donations, but not so great for the doxable breadcrumbs they leave behind.

โ€œI think the risk is tenfold for the dolls and Black trans siblings because of disproportionate scrutiny in light of these bathroom bills and also how we do mutual aid,โ€ said Thompson. โ€œWhenever I see a mutual aid request being reposted or processed it makes me nervous, because we’re basically doxing our most vulnerable friends.โ€ To reduce risk, she recommends people take down mutual aid posts as soon as needs are met and set their Venmo activity to private. โ€œI feel like the intention in listing off how all these systems of oppression impact our friends are meant to create a sense of urgency and care, but then months later it’s still floating around and is a goldmine for someone who wants to claim they were made to feel unsafe in a bathroom so they can claim $3k or further an agenda.โ€

The privacy attitudes on display at the event contrast with the dominant media narratives about trans communities a decade ago. Fresh off the Supreme Court victory in Obergefell vs. Hodges that legalized same-sex marriage, many at that time were convinced that trans visibility would pave the way to equality, as glossy magazine covers featuring stars like Laverne Cox declared a โ€œTrans Tipping Point.โ€ But while conditions for some trans people marginally improved, we all know what happened next: a wave of reactionary anti-trans state laws, culminating in the re-election of Donald Trump and a series of executive orders aimed at destroying trans peoplesโ€™ access to healthcare, sports, bathroomsโ€”essentially the ability to live a normal life.

At the same time, protection canโ€™t be a retreat back into the closet. โ€œItโ€™s still important for trans voices to be heard in online spaces,โ€ said Anna. โ€œItโ€™s not like I wanna go into the shadows or anything. I just donโ€™t want people to know my personal data, my personal records, any of that.โ€

โ€œBeing Black, I also understand the distinction between visibility and hypervisibility and the precarity and lack of agency that hypervisibility creates,โ€ said Thompson. โ€œIt’s tricky to find language around digital security that doesn’t imply queerness is something to hide or a shameful thing, because of course it’s not. I think having agency and purpose in how we can show up online and interact with tech as well as literacy around how technology and surveillance operates makes us better equipped.โ€

Janus Rose is New York City-based journalist, educator and artist whose work explores the impacts of A.I. and technology on activists and marginalized communities. Previously a senior editor atย VICE, she has been published in digital and print outlets includingย e-Flux Journal,ย DAZED Magazine,ย The New Yorker, andย Al Jazeera.

Olympic Athletes Rapinoe and Bird Slam IOC Trans Ban: โ€œIโ€™m Sickened By Itโ€

https://www.erininthemorning.com/p/olympic-athletes-rapinoe-and-bird

โ€œIt’s just a total acquiescence to the Trump Administration,โ€ Rapinoe said.

Just In Case A Reader Happens By With Some Idea, Or Knows Where To Share This One:

Stupid Is As Stupid Does

How Trumpโ€™s Vulgar, Criminal Easter Threat Enriches Iran

Juan Cole 04/06/2026

Ann Arbor (Informed Comment) โ€“ On Easter Sunday, Godโ€™s chosen in the White House issued a vulgar and unbalanced posting on his โ€œTruth Socialโ€ that epitomizes the insanity of his Iran War. Attending to it closely will help us understand how Trump has strengthened the government of the Islamic Republic and put it in control of global energy. Trump fondly imagines that he can dislodge Iran from this new ascendancy, but he is wrong, since it depends on sabotage, a sabotage that cannot be policed.


Piers Morgan

@piersmorganยท

Follow

This is embarrassing, Delete it, President โฆ@realDonaldTrumpโฉ – unless you want everyone to think youโ€™ve lost your marbles.

The foul language and clear mental imbalance visible in this announcement sparked a further round of calls for Trumpโ€™s removal under Article 25 of the Constitution, which is nothing more than an internet meme since Trump has surrounded himself on his cabinet with people even more certifiable than he is, and who wouldnโ€™t dare move against him.

Trump, having imbibed whatever substance it is that makes him manic, announced that โ€œTuesday will be Power Plant Day, and Bridge Day, all wrapped up in one, in Iran. There will be nothing like it!!!โ€

He is repeating a threat he made previously, to bomb Iranโ€™s civilian electricity-generating plants as well as its civilian bridges.

Iran has 98 major power plants fueled by fossil gas, which generate 85% of the countryโ€™s electricity. The largest, the Damavand power plant south of the capital, Tehran, has a generating capacity of over 2.8 gigawatts.

One of Iranโ€™s power plants is nuclear, at Bushehr. If Trump or Israel bombs it, the consequent radiation pollution will deeply harm the Arab Gulf states, not only through airborne particles but also by contaminating sea water, which is drawn on by the regionโ€™s desalinization plants. This exposure to radiation would certainly increase cancer risk in the region. There are mountains between Bushehr and the Iranian interior, so the radioactive particles would be blown west toward other countries such as the United Arab Emirates, Saudi Arabia and Qatar.

Striking civilian power plants, and above all nuclear ones, endangers the noncombatant population of children, women and unarmed men and violates International Humanitarian Law.

In fact, the International Criminal Court in the Hague issued โ€œwarrants of arrest for two individuals, Mr Sergei Kuzhugetovich Shoigu and Mr Valery Vasilyevich Gerasimov, in the context of the situation in Ukraine for alleged international crimes . . .โ€ on June 24, 2024. They were indicted for โ€œfor the war crime of directing attacks at civilian objects (article 8(2)(b)(ii) of the Rome Statute) and the war crime of causing excessive incidental harm to civilians or damage to civilian objects (article 8(2)(b)(iv) of the Rome Statute), and the crime against humanity of inhumane acts under article 7(1)(k) of the Rome Statute.โ€

Among the โ€œcivilian objectsโ€ that these Russian officials ordered attacked in Ukraine were power plants and structures such as the Kryukovsky Bridge.

So Trump is talking like a war criminal, which tells you why he has placed sanctions on International Criminal Court judges.

Trump already struck the unfinished B1 bridge linking Tehran to Karaj. Since it was not finished, it could not possibly have had a military purpose, contrary to the lies of the lying liars in the Trump administration who gave that as the excuse for hitting it.

Trump continued, โ€œOpen the Fuckinโ€™ Strait, you crazy bastards, or youโ€™ll be living in Hellโ€“ JUST WATCH!

It is not clear how a body of water such as a strait could copulate. However, it can engender revenue, and does so for Iran. A lot of revenue.

Iran has not actually closed the Strait of Hormuz entirely. It is exporting its own petroleum through that narrow aperture, mainly to China. Trump has been forced by the global oil shortage to lift sanctions on the Iranian tankers, and so Iran is also selling again to India. Before Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu rushed Trump into war on Iran on February 28, Iran was exporting about 1.4 million barrels a day to China. The price of petroleum was about $67 a barrel then, but Iran had to offer a steep discount to offset American sanctions, and so was probably only getting $57 or less a barrel. So Iran was getting something like $29 billion a year for its petroleum from China and a few other customers (90% goes to China).

China is now likely having to pay $110 a barrel for Iranian petroleum.

Iranโ€™s oil income just went up to $55 billion a year if these prices and this volume of trade persists, which is plausible. So the โ€œcrazy bastardsโ€ in charge of Iran have nearly doubled their income off the Netanyahu-Trump war because of the fertility, under their control, of the โ€œfuckinโ€™ Strait.โ€ The Iranian oil industry is state-owned, so all the money goes to the clerics and the Iranian Revolutionary Guards Corps, as well as to the conventional army and the elected institutions, the parliament and president. This extra income helps the government tamp down resistance, strengthening it against civil society. In any case, many Iranians under foreign attack are rallying around the flag. Of course there are also tax losses from the economic disruption of the war, but the vastly increased oil income helps make up for them as far as the government is concerned. If the price of oil goes to $200 a barrel, as it may well, Iranโ€™s government could get $100 billion a year for its petroleum.

Not only that, but Iran has instituted a toll system, wherein countries that have good relations with Iran and pay a fee can transit the Strait without fear of an Iranian drone attack. In contrast, countries that Iran believes contribute to the American war effort against Tehran such as the Emirates and Kuwait, are blockaded by the threat of such strikes. These tolls could be an ongoing and lucrative source of income for the government. Before the war, 138 ships transited the Strait daily. If that traffic resumes but each has to pay Iran a $2 million toll, that would bring in $96 billion a year, i.e. four times what Iran was getting for its petroleum before the war.

So hereโ€™s the thing. With the advent of Iranโ€™s Shahed drones, which can be manufactured inexpensively and of which it has tens and thousands, there is no way for anyone, including Trump and the US military, to stop Iran from sabotaging ships that wonโ€™t pay the $2 million. At least, I donโ€™t see how it could be done. Youโ€™d need tens of thousands of interceptors, and we hardly have any left. Moreover, interceptors cost $1.5 million apiece, so it makes much more sense to allow each ship to pay Iran the $2 million.


Container ship in Strait of Hormuz. (U.S. Navy photo by Mass Communication Specialist 2nd Class Indra Beaufort).Public Domain. Via Picryl .

Trump has shown Iran how it can go into the protection business in the Gulf for the long term. Nice oil shipping industry you have here, it would be a shame if anything happened to it. And off that, Iran actually increases its GDP substantially.

If Trump takes out Iranโ€™s electricity and bridges, he can interfere with its economy and its society in a big way. But he canโ€™t stop the drones or the protection racket that way. Moreover, Iran has made it clear that its response will be to take out the power plants in the Gulf Arab states as well as in Israel. Since the US and Israel are running low on interceptors, and since even small Shahed drones have great range and can do a lot of damage, Iranโ€™s threat is credible.

If Trump takes out Iranโ€™s petroleum-production capability, Iran will crash oil production in the Gulf, taking 20 million barrels a day off the market for years to come. That would certainly be another Great Depression and likely would spell the end of the oil industry, since everyone in the world would migrate to electric vehicles quickly.

So although Trump meant the phrase ironically and blasphemously, the Iranian authorities may well end up saying โ€œPraise be to Allahโ€ over Trumpโ€™s monumental stupidity.

https://www.juancole.com/2026/04/trumps-vulgar-criminal.html

Clay Jones, Leading Kansas

He Has Risen

To vote yes

Clay Jones

This cartoon was drawn for the Fredericksburg Advance. But don’t yell at them for it; you can yell at me.

If you live in Virginia, you have been bombarded with flyers about the special election on redistricting. And it’s not just flyers but also TV commercials, which are also popping up online. We are getting these things from both sides.

There is a special election in November on a state constitutional amendment that would give Democrats as many as four seats in Congress. The measure would also temporarily bypass the stateโ€™s redistricting commission to redraw maps in the middle of the decade.

The stateโ€™s Supreme Court approved the measure to be on the ballot less than a week before early voting began. State Republicans repeatedly tried to stop Democrats from moving forward with the referendum. The irony here is that Republicans claim that voting yes will disenfranchise voters, while they literally tried to keep this off the ballot so people couldn’t vote on it.

This is a direct response to Donald Trump and Republicans redistricting mid-decade to give themselves more seats. Donald Trump even said he was entitled to have more congressional seats. This is one reason why we need to No Kings protest. Donald Trump already believes he’s entitled to win elections heโ€™s lost. (snip-MORE, and it’s on point)


The Parsons Project

by Andrรฉ Swartley

Leading Kansas

Key points at a glance

  • Energy company Deep Fission is in the process of building a new and untested type of underground nuclear reactor in Parsons, KS
  • The Trump administration has reduced regulations to encourage nuclear power production
  • The reactor will likely power data centers for artificial intelligence
  • Large data centers consume huge amounts of water and energy and produce different types of pollution, leading to health risks for nearby residents

In November 2025 a two-year-old energy company called Deep Fission broke ground in Parsons, Kansas. They hope this project will enable them to install the second ever energy producing nuclear reactor in the state, after Wolf Creek, potentially with more reactors on the way in the future. If the early โ€œcharacterizationโ€ drilling goes to plan, they claim the reactor could begin pumping electricity into the grid in the near future.

Parsons is a city of 10,000 in southeastern Kansas, near the Oklahoma border. Iโ€™ve lived in Kansas for most of my life and I had not heard of Parsons until last week. So, why is Deep Fission in Parsons, Kansas, and why now? Not coincidentally, the Great Plains Industrial Park, also located in Parsons, has lately been advertised as a prime location for new data centers to power the trillion-dollar (yes, trillion with a T) artificial intelligence boom forced upon us by large technology corporations and their venture capitalist backers. Which means the Parsons nuclear reactor project would likely come as a package with one or more new data centers, along with potential economic prosperity and a host of legitimate concerns that community members have already raised.

Part 2: The New Nuclear Power

While the Department of Energy set a goal for the Parsons reactor to go online in July of this year, Deep Fission themselves are aiming to connect to the grid by 2027 or 2028. Two years is still an unusually rapid rollout for a nuclear power plant, which usually takes 6-10 years from groundbreaking to full operation.

This reduced timeline comes by way of the Trump Administrationโ€™s efforts to slow the national and worldwide adoption of renewable energies like wind and solar power. In February of this year alone, Trumpโ€™s Department of Energy halted the approval of โ€œ168 projects โ€“ those that focused on renewable energy projectsโ€ while allowing nearly 11,000 other energy projects to proceed as planned, including new nuclear energy projects. Executive Order 14301 in May of 2025 provided Deep Fission with the means to build their experimental nuclear reactor on such a short timetable.

Nuclear energy is typically labeled as โ€œcleanโ€ energy compared to coal, oil, and natural gas, meaning that it releases fewer pollutants into the air and water than fossil fuel consumption. Still, there are two main concerns. First is the disposal of nuclear waste, which ranges from the lightly contaminated clothing of plant workers to the lethally radioactive spent fuel a plant produces over time. This latter โ€œaccounts for just 3% of the total volume of waste, but contains 95% of the total radioactivity.โ€

A relatively new method in the US and Europe for disposing of our most dangerous nuclear waste is to bury it very deep underground, so that it can be surrounded by solid rock to provide the same level of pressure containment as required at structure at a surface nuclear reactor facility. The father-daughter team that eventually founded Deep Fission originally created Deep Isolation to dispose of nuclear waste. Deep Fission takes their concept a step further by placing the entire reactor, and therefore its most dangerously radioactive elements, into a borehole drilled one mile underground.

The second main concern related to nuclear energy production is, of course, accidents or attacks. It is true that large-scale nuclear accidents are very rare, but when they happen, they become instant, globally recognized disasters whose names we all know: Chernobyl, Three Mile Island, Fukushima. The effects are so widespread as to be practically impossible to quantify. The reactor explosion and meltdown in Chernobyl, for example, caused several dozen deaths directly related to radiation exposure, but various studies have predicted anywhere from thousands up to a million eventual additional cancer deaths. Not to mention the environmental and economic cost to the entire region around Chernobyl. And radioactive boars still terrorize people and farmland in the region around the Fukushima plant in Japan.

But those issues are known, and regulations have historically attempted to shore up potential dangers posed by new plants. In contrast, nothing like the underground nuclear reactor in Parsons, Kansas has ever been attempted before, and thanks to Executive Order 14301, will not need to go through long established design and testing phases that other types of nuclear reactors have been subject to in the past. John Young, a mining environmental regulatory specialist who lives in Sedgwick County, asks, โ€œWhy abandon the current regulatory process for something created out of whole cloth with no public input? And no one can define the current regulatory pathways for Federal and State authorizations.

โ€œWhat,โ€ Young asks in frustration, โ€œcould possibly go wrong?โ€

Part 3: Data Centers and Artificial Intelligence

So that is a glimpse into the nuclear energy side of things. Next we must address concerns around data centers and artificial intelligence. Data centers come in different sizes, like the smaller center being proposed in Wellington, KS, which would reportedly โ€œuse roughly 30% of the cityโ€™s electrical capacity while generating an estimated $1.3 million in annual electric utility revenueโ€ while consuming only two gallons of water per day. Larger data centers consume resources less modestly. โ€œAround the country, and the world, there is a land race among the big tech companies for sites for their data centers,โ€ claims a November 2024 investigative report by Rolling Stone. Data centers are much newer than nuclear energy technology, yet the ways in which they harm communities near them have already become apparent.

Water: โ€œLarge data centers can consume up to 5 million gallons per day, equivalent to the water use of a town populated by 10,000 to 50,000 people,โ€ according to a June 2025 study by the Environmental and Energy Study Institute (EESI). And data centers built explicitly to power AI represent the fastest growing portion of the market.

Last year, researchers at the University of California, Riverside calculated that ChatGPTโ€”one of several popular Large Language Models (LLMs) vying for marketplace dominanceโ€”answered about 10,000 queries per second. The processing load to do so guzzled about 6,000 liters (or about 1,000 toilet flushes) of fresh water per second, all day, every day. That is only generating written text. AI photos require more water, and still more for AI video. โ€œThe extraction process is permanent,โ€ explains the University of Alabama at Birmingham Institute for Human Rights. Water used to cool data centers evaporates as it cools hot components, meaning it can no longer be used by people in the region who need water for drinking, cooking, bathing, laundry, and general survival.

Pollution: Unfortunately, it is not only consumption of water to worry about. The evaporation of water cooling data centers leaves behind higher concentrations of nitrates and other contaminants leaked through agricultural fertilizers and pesticides into local water supplies, drastically increasing incidents of โ€œrare cancers, muscle disorders, and miscarriagesโ€ among people who live nearby. Geographically, Parsons, Kansas sits atop the Alluvial and Ozark Aquifers.

Reports of noise pollution have increased near data centers as well. Residents in different Virginia towns experienced disturbing high and low frequency humming in a wide radius around two new data centers.

Energy: New York City is the most populous city in the United States. The population consumes about 11 billion watts of electricity per hour. However, by 2030, โ€œpower usage ofโ€ฆdata centers is projected to rise to nearly 2967 trillion watts an hour,โ€ increasing load and wear on current energy infrastructure and raising energy prices for regular people while tech companies receive sweetheart discounts from local and state institutions.

Gradual Disempowerment: Artificial Intelligence scholars and ethicists have identified a trend they call โ€œgradual disempowerment.โ€ As AI becomes more capable, people will continue to offload, โ€œalmost all societal functions, such as economic labor, decision making, artistic creation, and even companionshipโ€ to their favorite AI service. The scariest part is that these studies have actually measured reduced cognitive ability โ€œat neural, linguistic, and behavioral levelsโ€ after only a few months of using services like ChatGPT.

These same experts predict that the disempowerment will not only come at the individual level, but also at the societal level, as lawmakers turn their attention and favor even more toward tech companies and AI services that increasingly take over tasks that used to be performed by human beings.

DHS and ICE: The Department of Homeland Security (DHS) and Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE), and have been using AI models to power their violent and unpopular immigration raids across the country. They are also surveilling, threatening, and creating databases of protesters.

Part 4: What Next?

The purpose of this article is not to overwhelm with doomsaying or inevitability. If the Deep Fission underground reactor works as advertised, it could genuinely provide cleaner energy than fossil fuel and mitigate some of the effects of climate change. But to get there safely, we need to demand transparency and regulatory protections from political and corporate leaders. If enough of us speak up in place like ParsonsTopekaSedgwick County, and every corner of our town, state, country, and world, we embolden those watching, each other, and ourselves to continue building the world we want and deserve.

Trump’s Miami Library Monstrosity Is A Total Scam

tRump couldn’thelp himself but he had to attack Obama making claims of how bad Obama’s library is.ย  Then Sam describes tRump’s grift / scam on his library, using tax free dollars to build a hotel that he will make money from.ย  Then Sam talks about the citizenship birthright case.ย  Hugs

Trump Panics As The World Leaves Him Behind | Heather โ€˜Digbyโ€™ Parton | TMR

I love watching Heather Digby Parton.ย  Hugs

H

Zohran Mamdani Isn’t Backing Down

Because of Mamdani’s policies being for the people to help the people and his huge popularity is going to affect or should affect how other democrats run their races.ย  The people respond to taxing the wealthy more and using those funds to help the lower incomes.ย  Maybe the young today don’t remember how it was before Reagan slashed the taxes on the wealthy when infrastructure was maintained, services for the public were available, when schools were properly funded and higher education was inexpensive and government offices to serve the public were fully staffed along with so much more.ย  But the more the upper incomes take of the country’s money the less is available for the rest of the people.ย  A large part of the democratic party became addicted to that big money from corporate and wealthy donors so they did not fight for the people as they should have instead helping companies and businesses to make more profit.ย  The people saw the shift by the democrats and stopped supporting them.ย  Mamdani has shown how to get the voters back on the democrats side again.ย  Hugs