Is this how we beat China? Trump’s AI dream guts small-town USA



Imagine Arab sheik-funded AI supercenters dotting rural America, staffed by foreign labor, draining local water and power, and hollowing out small-town life — all so Big Tech can build its digital technocracy. Sounds like the globalist Agenda 2030 schemes we’ve warned about for years. But shockingly, it’s now become the Trump administration’s top priority.

President Trump’s team is pushing to override red-state zoning laws and fast-track thousands of these massive data centers. The losers? Small-town Americans. The winners? The “rich men north of Richmond.”

Who is looking out for the people when Trump and the globalists are on the same side? “We have to beat China” is the rallying cry — a lazy excuse to silence questions and crush local regulations. But we need AI that serves productivity, not a technocracy that rules over us.

Noise levels hit 96 decibels. Imagine a leaf blower that never turns off. Would you want that in your backyard? It may be coming sooner than you think.

Trump’s “Stargate” plan would spend a staggering half-trillion dollars — public and private — to build thousands of AI data centers. It’s like rushing to amputate a limb. Sometimes it’s necessary, but any sane person would demand second and third opinions first.

Yet, instead of debate, we got betrayal. Tucked quietly into the One Big Beautiful Bill Act was a provision from AI czar David Sacks banning all state regulation of AI systems for 10 years. House Speaker Mike Johnson (R-La.) gaslit us, claiming this would stop California’s tech tyranny. In truth, it targets Trump’s own base: farmers, ranchers, and rural voters. Just like eminent domain carve-outs for green energy, it strips local power to benefit Big Tech.

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Even before Stargate breaks ground, rural Trump country is already grappling with AI data centers draining water, electricity, and property values. Telling locals to shut up because “we must beat China” is pure demagoguery.

Copying China’s playbook

Meanwhile, the same administration opening the floodgates for these projects is also welcoming hundreds of thousands of Chinese tech students. This is déjà vu from the post-9/11 security state. Back then, we cracked down on Americans while doubling immigration from the very regions funding terror. It was never about safety — it was always about the grift.

Across Trump country, protests are swelling against these land and energy grabs. You can almost hear Oliver Anthony’s lyrics echoing over the farmland: “These rich men north of Richmond ... wanna know what you think, wanna know what you do.”

The point of AI should be to improve our lives — not force us to sacrifice local resources and freedoms so it can exist as a modern Baal.

Troubling open-ended questions about what this “data god” will be used for lay heavily on these conversations, and it’s quite hard not to envision it being used for control. We’re told we must become like China to beat China, yet what we’re building is arguably worse. And the more immediate consequence will be irreparable damage to our rural landscapes and national power grid.

Rural communities bear the cost

Is it any wonder rural communities want to use local zoning laws to at least slow this stampede? These areas have land, fewer regulations, and desperate politicians eager for new investment. Big Tech knows exactly who to target.

Virginia’s Loudoun and Prince William Counties were early victims. Now, the industry is setting sights on Northwest Georgia, rural Oklahoma, Texas, and Arizona. What these projects promise is anything but rural tranquility.

RELATED: Trump bets big on AI to make America dominant again

  Photo by Alvarez via Getty Images

A single proposed project in American Township, Ohio, for example, was slated to cover nearly 170 acres. Consider that 4,750 of these leviathans were expected to break ground just this year. What’s going to happen to America’s countryside once the thousands of data centers scheduled for this year alone are built, in addition to the subsequent thousands we can expect in the coming years?

According to the Institute for Energy Research, by 2030, data centers’ electricity consumption is on track to surpass the entire electricity consumption of Japan today. In the United States, that number will account for almost half of the growth in electricity demand between now and 2030. In short, in just a few years, data centers will consume more energy than what is currently required for manufacturing all energy-intensive goods — such as aluminum, steel, and cement — combined.

The strain on water is even more concerning. A single large data center can consume upwards of five million gallons of water per day to cool the vast arrays of servers — the equivalent of a small city. Much of the water use is consumptive, meaning it evaporates and is not returned to the local watershed.

In water-scarce regions, such as Arizona — one of the primary locations targeted for these water centers — this can put a tremendous strain on already limited resources, creating a new and powerful competitor for a resource that is essential for farming, ranching, and residential life.

The daily toll of these data centers in rural America is already steep. Backup generators and cooling fans roar day and night. Locals near Virginia sites compare it to “a lawnmower in your living room 24/7.” Noise levels hit 96 decibels. Imagine a leaf blower that never turns off. Would you want that in your backyard?

It may be coming sooner than you think.

Moreover, thousands of AI data centers would destroy much of America’s rural landscapes — rolling hills replaced by giant, windowless warehouses. Yes, ugly infrastructure like power plants is sometimes essential — but at least they provide energy to the community. These data centers take energy away. A handful would be one thing. Thousands amount to a dystopia.

A better AI future

The United States could secure its lead in the AI era not by copying foreign actors’ brute-force, centralized strategy — which imposes staggering burdens on local communities — but by fostering an agile, resilient, and open ecosystem. Instead of merely stockpiling raw processing power, we should prioritize building AI systems that are accurate, reliable, globally accessible, and seamlessly integrate with existing technology.

Decentralized AI infrastructure, often pairing AI with blockchain, offers a smarter path. It keeps data under local control, bolsters privacy, complies with local laws, and dramatically cuts the risk of catastrophic breaches tied to massive single points of failure. It also encourages flexibility, allowing open-source models to flourish and adapt more quickly than bureaucratic mega-projects ever could.

If we truly want an AI future that serves American families — not Big Tech oligarchs or foreign monarchs — we must champion technology that empowers people, protects communities, and respects the land. Anything less isn’t just bad policy. It’s a betrayal of the very America these rural voters fight to preserve.

Why it's meaningless to blame  'climate change' for the LA wildfires



In a prior article, I made the case for why evolutionary theory, simply put, is fake. Specifically, I said that mankind is outside the jurisdiction of the mechanism we call natural selection, due to humanity’s ability to exercise free will and transform the environment according to its will.

However, if you do indeed happen to be a believer in evolutionary theory, then my question for you is: How do you reconcile that with climate change?

Early park managers, tasked with maintaining Yellowstone’s 'pristine' state, made decisions based on limited ecological knowledge.

Aren’t humans part of nature?

Therefore, aren’t they subject to the same physical and biological laws as any other species?

And if natural selection is the mechanism through which life adapts and evolves, then human activity must also be viewed as an extension of this process, right?

The anthropogenic paradox

This raises an intriguing paradox: If human intervention in ecosystems — whether through agriculture, industrialization, or urbanization — is a natural extension of evolutionary processes, then isn’t climate change also a natural extension of the evolutionary process?

So what’s with the apocalyptic rhetoric from the left-wing environmentalists?

Are humans just animals as they say? Or are we something more?

Why do the environmentalists make a big fuss about climate change if the destinies of every other species and ecosystem are playing out the way the theory of evolution says they will?

I bring this up because the climate change discussion is rearing its head again as a result of the wildfires blazing through Los Angeles.

It seems that every time there’s a natural disaster in the news cycle, man-made climate change is immediately identified as the culprit. Which then promptly becomes the pretext for passing or enforcing some kind of legislation to scale back our carbon footprint or lower our emissions.

In other words: to lower our standard of living and increase our taxes.

When 'conservation' destroys

This reminds me of a story. Allow me to share with you the case of the historic Yellowstone National Park.

When President Theodore Roosevelt visited Yellowstone in 1903, he witnessed a vibrant ecosystem teeming with elk, bison, bears, wolves, and other wildlife.

Within a decade, however, this dynamic biodiversity began to disappear — thanks to misguided conservation policies.

Early park managers, tasked with maintaining Yellowstone’s "pristine" state, made decisions based on limited ecological knowledge. For instance, fearing the extinction of elk, they aggressively culled predators like wolves and restricted Indigenous peoples from hunting on lands they had sustainably managed for generations. These interventions, though well-intentioned, set off a cascade of ecological disruptions.

The unchecked growth of elk populations led to overgrazing, which decimated trees essential for beavers to construct dams. As beavers disappeared, so did their critical role in water management, causing meadows to dry up, trout and otter populations to dwindle, and soil erosion to escalate.

Subsequent efforts to control the burgeoning elk numbers by mass culling failed to restore the damaged ecology, and the original balance of flora and fauna was lost.

Over time, it became evident that Indigenous hunting practices had historically maintained a delicate ecological balance. The idealized notion of "untouched wilderness," once held by European settlers, gave way to the understanding that Native Americans had long shaped these landscapes — burning plains grasses, managing forests, and regulating animal populations. Their exclusion from Yellowstone was recognized, in hindsight, as a mistake.

Yet, this error was merely one among many in the park’s management history. Policies protecting certain species, like grizzlies, were later reversed. Wolves, exterminated early on, were reintroduced decades later.

Fire suppression policies ignored the regenerative role of natural fires, leading to catastrophic blazes when fire management strategies changed.

Even the introduction of rainbow trout in the 1970s devastated native cutthroat trout populations.

Each intervention triggered unforeseen consequences, requiring further corrective actions, often with equally damaging outcomes.

The failure of fundamentalism

The point of this mini history lesson is to say that “climate change,” more often than not, is a result of horrible management by bureaucrats and political actors.

When environmentalists and political actors seek to pursue some shiny new “green” policy, their actions almost always end up destabilizing the ecosystem. What these climate change fundamentalists fail to understand is that every intervention in an ecosystem triggers a cascade of changes. They oversimplify the problem, seeking universal solutions for issues that are deeply contextual.

This pattern underscores a critical lesson: Environmental conservation is complex.

Direct interventions often reveal the limits of human understanding. Passive protection — simply leaving nature alone — has also proven insufficient. Ecosystems are dynamic, constantly evolving as species rise, fall, and adapt. Preserving a specific ecological state requires the understanding that every action carries trade-offs, benefiting some species while harming others.

For instance, blanket strategies like reducing carbon emissions fail to account for the unique ecological and economic dynamics of individual regions.

In some cases, interventions aimed at mitigating climate change — such as large-scale reforestation projects — have disrupted local ecosystems, displacing species and communities.

Solar farms and wind turbines, hailed as clean energy solutions, have displaced wildlife and altered habitats. Similarly, the rush to replace gasoline vehicles with electric ones has created new environmental challenges, such as the extraction of rare earth metals for batteries.

A philosophical divide

These unintended consequences mirror the missteps of Yellowstone’s early managers, who sought to preserve nature without understanding its intricacies. So while the goal of reducing carbon footprints sounds nice in theory, the methods used to achieve it often vastly overlook the complexity of ecosystems.

Moreover, the debate over climate change reveals a deeper philosophical divide: whether humanity sees itself as separate from or integral to nature. If we accept that human activity is part of the evolutionary process, then the distinction between “natural” and “unnatural” collapses, along with any moral imperative to restrain our activities.

As I just demonstrated, ecosystems are never static. They are in constant flux, shaped by forces both internal and external.

If human activity — whether farming, industrialization, or even climate change — is part of this ongoing flux, then it must also be considered a natural phenomenon within the framework of evolution. Under this view, anthropogenic climate change is not an aberration but a manifestation of humanity’s role as a dominant species shaping the environment.

After all, we’re just carbon-based monkeys who are trying to compete with the rest of the world to get by, right?

But if we reject the idea that human activity is part of the evolutionary process, then we naturally assume a higher moral standard and responsibility.

The human factor

In my view, ecosystems are not governed by a single guiding principle like “survival of the fittest.” Rather, they are intricate networks where species interact in ways that defy simple categorization.

Human beings, as conscious agents, have introduced an unpredictable variable: the ability to act with intention and foresight. Unlike other species, which adapt reactively to their environments, humans shape their surroundings deliberately.

This capacity for deliberate action is both our greatest strength and our greatest challenge. It allows us to build cities, grow food, and harness energy, but it also places us in the precarious position of being the only species capable of mismanaging our systems to the point of destruction (see: L.A. wildfires).

In short, the interplay between evolution, human intervention, and climate change reveals the inadequacy of the simplistic narratives we’re being fed.

Both evolutionary theory and conservation efforts must evolve to account for the complexity of human agency. We must accept, just as Yellowstone’s managers learned, that there is no perfect formula for preserving ecosystems.

Instead, we must embrace a mindset of adaptive management, one that respects local contexts and prioritizes long-term sustainability. By doing so, we can navigate the paradox of being both a product and a shaper of nature, ensuring that our interventions contribute to the flourishing of life rather than its demise.