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Optional products and services may have fees or charges, state an annual percentage yield and cash back for Chime Prime only. No minimum balance required for more information on APY rates, my pay spot me and travel perks to go to chime.com/disclosures. Aaron Brockovich Welcome to the show. Thank you, Sean Ryan, welcome to be here. Pretty cool.
I don't know, but so, AI data centers, we're going to have a whole episode on it today. Just yes, I saw some of the stuff that you were uncover. I don't know a whole lot about AI data centers. Inside of all this, because I haven't talked about all the good side of all, but so we're going to dive into all that it today. It's going to be super eye-opening, but I want to start with just saying I really appreciate what you're doing.
“So I had no idea about the water coming from this, honestly with you.”
You and me both, you know, I found out about data centers is kind of like, you know, I feel like I'm in such like a time warp in my life right now. And you'll find out I'm kind of that person that's, I don't know, I'm super connected. I feel energies, we are energy, this planet is energy, and I worry that we've gotten so, you know, into our phones, we've become disconnected from our natural environment and we're missing a lot. And I feel, again, like I did, it just came out of the blue, that young girl, 31 years old, starting in Hinkley, California,
who really didn't know what she was getting into, but I could feel it. And I was compelled to want to do something. And that happened with the data centers. Yeah. And I got 30 emails from individuals from the same town with concerns about the data centers.
So anytime, you know, 10, 20, 30, 40 people at once come to me about an issue from the same town that's generally occludes something's going on. And I'm like these data centers. What's going on? Let me take a look at it. So I started looking at data centers and it's water consumption. But I'm a dyslexic, so I do a lot of things backwards in that regard for me and my work.
I always have to go back to source. You know, they say dyslexic's read backward. I can read fine.
“But I calculate and I have to go back to source, where did it start what's happening?”
And I wanted to create a map so I could see the big picture. I'm very visual. I think a lot of us are. And I say this with respect because I too have lived in my own bubble. And we get busy in our own lives. And we stop looking beyond that. And so when you see a town that's being poisoned, you might think it's just one town and it could never be us. But when I can create the big picture, it changes the story.
So with the data centers, what I thought was one town within 72 hours, I looked at all the submissions. So I created a self-reporting registry database where they could submit what was happening in their own backyard.
I don't know why we wouldn't pay attention to the very people living, breathi...
And it blew up to the whole country.
How long ago did you start this? Ten weeks ago. Just ten weeks ago. Ten weeks ago.
“And you, I mean, I want to give you an introduction before we go to your phone.”
I'm sorry, I just jumped right in. Did I really get like 7,000 something submissions? Well, 1,000 submissions. I updated the map last night and we've now penned 8,000 submissions.
So we read each submission and we vet its location and some people won't have their zip codes in there.
We can't find it or it's a solar farm with a data center coming, but it's not there yet. So we read each one. So we're a little behind because we're reading it and we're a small group and vetting them. But we're now over 8,000 if not possibly 9,000 penned on the map. And you just like you can't even see most of America. There's just so many data centers going in everywhere.
We'll put it up on screen right now. But so I was very, very surprised, very quickly. And again, I feel like when I stepped out into Hinkley, California. I could feel it and I could see it. I mean, you know, any time you see two added frogs and cream water. Yeah, that's kind of a fucked up situation. And I'm not one to back away from anyone trying to tell me what I see.
And that happens a lot. And on the data centers, I don't think we saw the big picture. Because we're busy in our own bubble. Again, I've gotten that way too. And so you may think it's one isolated place when it's everywhere. And what I'm learning with the data centers is what began with one town became a whole country. And I now have 11 other countries reporting.
“So it's 11 other countries, what are the, what countries?”
India, Australia, New Zealand, Canada, Portugal, Croatia, the UK, Scotland, Ireland. And I have to think about what the other two are. It's a whole globe. It's the whole planet.
And you know, I mean, you've always been an environmentalist, right? Come in.
Yeah, I mean, I think I got labeled that. Yeah, let me, let me give you an introduction here a little clip. Aaron Brockovich, you became a household name after helping expose one of the largest groundwater contamination cases in US history involving Pacific gas and electric. That investigation led to a historic $333 million settlement. And inspired the Academy Award-winning film, Aaron Brockovich, where Julie Roberts portrayed you.
For more than 30 years, you've investigated environmental contamination, corporate mix conduct, and public health issues. Helping communities take on some of the most powerful companies in America. Today, you're focused on the rapid expansion of AI data centers, sounding the alarm about their impact on water resources, energy, infrastructure, and local communities. You've also launched a nationwide initiative to help track data center development.
You're the author of several books, including Superman's Not Coming, which examines America's water crisis, and they need to protect one of the most vital resources. Man, it's just like everywhere you turn in this country, and probably in the world, there's some crisis going on. I just watch this movie, this documentary on Netflix, is called The Uh, it's about plastics, micro plastics, and the plastic detox. Have you seen that?
Oh, yeah. In the fertility crisis.
“Are you talking about PFAS, perfluor, octinoc acids?”
Yes. And the microplastics, yeah, we work on that across the country. And you know, there's definitely concern with the data centers and their water consumption. And they're using PFAS in the coolant, and then that has to be disposed of. And I'm starting to just now get a lot of information in from whistleblowers, some things that I'm not sure.
I'm liking what I'm reading. People who are managing these facilities that are now seeing runoff and toxic runoff. And the chemicals involved. There's no regulations. There's no oversight of any way shape or form. This is a free for all out there. And so I'm starting to get those all that information coming in. I'm starting to create the stats, but is a plethora of chemicals.
I mean, we've just become this industrialized country and all these chemicals...
Absolutely.
I had this guy Zach Lannon.
He's running for governor in Iowa.
“And he was a big, I think he was big, Baham movement, sort of.”
Yeah. I don't know how he couldn't be. I was, too. Until I've wound up, you know, it seems like it's complete bullshit at this point with the glyphoto. Do you know about the glyphosate stuff?
No, about it. I've actually written some things for legislation out in the good old Kansas, which I meant to say to you. Because I was born and raised in Lawrence, Kansas, you're from Missouri. That's right. That's right.
I would be the girl that was pulling all the tiger's tails out of the truck. I'm telling you, we would just get into that because I'm such a j-hawker. But I'm game night. If you were missing a tail from your trunk, I took it. Right on.
Just on. But yeah, he came on and we were talking about the glyphosate issue. And, you know, I mean, there's this administration ran on, you know, ran on Mahal. Let's make America healthy again, right? Then they give immunity to the foreign glyphosate companies and call it a national security concern.
We also label the fentanyl crisis of national security concern. A hundred thousand people died from fentanyl, six hundred and eighteen thousand died from cancer. Cancer isn't even an organic disease. It's not that that's what I'm hearing. It's all this shit that we have put into the environment that's given every one and everything.
Cancer. And, and then they give them the give them immunity. The highest concentration of glyphosate in the country is Iowa. The highest concentration of cancer in the country is Iowa.
“How the fuck is that not a national security concern?”
Right. I think I asked myself that question. And I think everybody in the communities asked themselves the same question. So, I mean, shit the cancer drugs are probably also in the lobbying. Trying to get the glyphosate companies immunity.
Yeah. So, they can treat cancer patients. Like it's just everything is for sale in this place. It's fucking disgusting. It is.
And, you know, I think I'm observing, especially with the data center movement. Because the people are waking up. Something's changing out there. And you can feel it. There's a shift happening.
“And I don't know, you know, kind of going back to whether we all get involved in our own lives.”
And then when we see the bigger picture, something happens. We realize that we're not alone.
I mean, in my entire 30 years of working, I've never seen.
In a situation that has been bipartisan. Where everybody's being affected. And I said this morning, I thought it was last night this morning. It's almost. I just, I'm watching this happen with the data centers.
I'm working with these people. And I just am getting this huge emotion of pride. And I am so proud of them. And I am watching. When we are united together, I'm watching them. It's amazing.
What we can get done. And that is happening here that I, in my whole career, haven't seen. Where we're waking up and we're united on the same issue. And that's the very valuable resources that none of us can sustain life without. And these data centers is jeopardizing all of it at once.
Our land, our farms, our food, our water supply, everything is on the table. And I started the map so I could see the bigger picture. And as I'm watching people recognize this, and people being united, and people working and people showing up. Like, I wrote Superman's Not Coming.
And that never scared me.
Because I knew eventually we would show up and they are. That's good to hear.
That's great to hear people united on something too.
I think that's happening more and more every day.
Every day.
“Because every day you look, there's a fire to put out.”
There is a bonfire, a huge fire. And I think, you know, we lost ourself. I'm probably, oh, I'm going to go here. And I'm going to get a fucking phone call that goes, oh, I can't believe why did you go there. And it's just happening.
And, you know, I want to share with people, you know, sitting here in this room with you, and your photographs and stuff. It's energy. I'm very connected to it. There's a vibe in here.
There's an openness in here. Just, just real transparency. There's just something miraculous that I truly feel in this room.
“And I'm so compelled as I've watched what's gone on across this country with all of these environmental issues.”
And it's going to bring me to a story. And I hope you'll give me the time to share it. And it's called the Wizard of Oz. What's here? Okay, so I'm bored and raised in Lawrence Kansas.
I love the Wizard of Oz, the movie.
I always wanted to be Dorothy.
And I was always afraid of flying monkeys. But I was fascinated with the film. But I became more fascinated with the book. The original book written by El Frank Baum. The Wizard of Oz.
And that series of books that led to the film. Have you ever read the book? I have it. Well, I hope you go to a big Google dive later today. Because there is an entire political allegory to the book The Wizard of Oz.
Is this the wicked series? No, it's the original The Wizard of Oz. And it's been studied by a many of great scholar on the political allegory. And I got hooked on this about 10 years ago. And I'm like, we are running a parallel.
And this is the allegory and here is the story. So El Frank Baum wrote the book The Wizard of Oz at the pre-hight of the Industrial Revolution. Pre-hight of the Industrial Revolution. As a way to teach his children the power of individualism
and thinking from oneself and a world that would increasingly begin to speak for you. That right there stopped me. But teaching your children the power of individualism and thinking for oneself in a world that would increasingly begin to think and speak for you. That's fascinating to me.
So but here is the whole political allegory that's been very well studied. So Dorothy is all of us girls in America that have a dream.
“You know, I always wanted to run away and move to California, right?”
So you know, I left home to go do that. So Wizard of Oz begins at Dorothy in Kansas runs away from home. And while she's run away, she runs into the kind of, you know, snake oil, silzy kind of guy when a twister emerges. And the twister in the political allegory is a representation of disruption in Washington, D.C.
And so she runs back home. We know that she gets hit in the head. And the house gets lifted up and she lands in Oz. I can't tell you how many times I have felt in my life. I'm like, "Dota, we are not in Kansas City anymore." I just go through my head all the time.
It's one of the first things I went through by and when I walked out,
I fell for it, yeah. But, and so the house lands on the munchkins, who are representation in the mass citizens, who are frustrated and thought Dorothy was there to save them. And so she wanted to get back home and they told her to follow the yellow brick road. Well, the yellow brick road is a representation of the gold standard. Follow the path of the money to the sitting wizard who can get you home.
Follow the standard of the gold of the money. Follow the path. And so it goes on in this political allegory about the first person she meets is the tin man. And the tin man is a representation of industrial workers who will lose their heart. And the cowardly lion is a representation of El Frank Bombs best friend. It's William Brian's, Jenny or Brian's, is William Brian's, Jenny.
He was always running for populist president known for his fiery rhetoric but...
And then the scarecrow, who is a representation of the American farmer, who at that time,
“all the banks were buying his land, therefore they thought the farmer had no brain.”
So this is the cast of the American people. The girl next door, industrial worker, the politician, and the farmer. So off they go on the yellow brick road. So we know the story there where the wicked witch kind of is along and puts them all to sleep. And now wicked witch in the political allegory is a representation of industry that doesn't want you to find out.
So they get put to sleep in the poppy fields, poppy fields. So we know the good witch comes along and wakes them up. And it's on this journey where they get put to sleep that I have paused and gone. I'm wondering if that happened to us. Did we get comfortable?
Did we get complacent? Did we buy an illusion?
Did we listen to the bullshit?
Now, as they woke up, and I see what we were talking about a minute ago, we waking up. There's a shift. It's happening. There's something really going on out there.
But as you know, they get to the wizard and they pull back the curtain. And when did they find? Mass surveillance. Mass surveillance. Somebody back there pulled out a lot of switches and levers and not really certain what the outcome would be either.
“But here's the thing for me that just I think about all the time.”
The lesson that they learned in the end. We all watched it. See, you had a heart. You had a brain. And you had a courage.
You had it all along to find your way back. And I'm watching that happening. I get firsthand view on the ground watching this come to life that we in this world of all this technology that's taking over for us. I think about a glitch and going to minute. Wait a minute.
I know how to think. I know how to feel. And I've lost. And what's in that gut is that courage. It will be up to us, all of us,
to make the necessary changes as we move forward into a world that I hope that we can leave in a legacy behind. That is every element that we need to sustain life. Our land, our farmers, our food, our health, our water, our air. Because without it, this game over. And I just feel this absolute, it's bizarre for me sitting here with you calling.
Something's changing here. And I don't know if it is the pressure of these data centers that are being built to feed this AI engine.
And I've always said, you know, use AI for the good tool that it is.
It isn't be all in doll, no, all everything. I don't take, I don't listen to half the shit that AI says to me. You shouldn't see my thread if I jump on AI because I like to find out and run little queries what it's thinking. And I'm just like, this is like, that's inaccurate information. That's bullshit.
Fuck off. I mean, it's a tool. You have to use it appropriately. But these data centers that are feeding it are going to zap.
“All these necessary resources that I think is really squeezing the people there.”
They're concerned about their water. They know what's going to happen if they lose their water. They're concerned about the destruction of all the forest and the woods and the creeks and the rivers and the wildlife. See, everyone in that counts to the whole. And it's just being destroyed and it's become a push for them.
I, I wonder if they're questioning humanity at this point. And, and if they're going to lose everything, I think they're going to stand up and fight for everything. I think a lot of people are questioning humanity at this point. Yep. And a multitude of assets.
And I think you're going to watch them rise up. I really do. It helps. It sticks to too high. If you've been listening to the show for a while, you know this is something I care about.
We've had regenerative farmers and health experts on. We've talked about soil health, clean water, glyphosate, food security and how disconnected. Most Americans are from where their food actually comes from. Might be time to start paying some attention. We've talked about foreign ownership of American farmland.
China.
We even did an episode that called out the government for selling off public lands in Utah.
“And when you start looking at all of it together, you realize there's a lot going on between the land,”
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“Join the mission to fight for the family farm because you know what?”
They fight for us. Go to moinkbox.com/SRS and get free chicken wings in every box for a year. As long as you're a pain customer, that's moinkbox.com/SRS. I don't think anybody really knows what to do. I think maybe the, I mean, I don't know where you're happening.
I think voting's bullshit. Yeah, you know, I mean, it's one of the same just different perspective. It's just I don't, I don't, and people don't know what to do. I don't know what to do. I've been watching him.
It starts at a local level. It's kind of sad to see that there appears to be a lot of local councils who, you know, are being bought off. Well, that's what I mean. You're going to get into this. My wife grew up in Boko Raton for him.
And used to be according to her, I'd never saw it.
But used to be a nice little beach town. Not anymore, man. I moved there. I was there for about two or three years. And she would tell me she would go to the city council.
You know, and when they do the votes. And try to save like the little bitty, you know, no bigger than the size of this room, little green space that's left. Boom. Gone. You know, and there would be hundreds.
Maybe I don't know. Lots of people in these meetings, the citizens that are raising concerns. And she would say, you know, it would just everybody in that room will be on the same page. Now, we want to keep, you know, the old post office. Or we want to keep this little, you know, 8th of an acre park.
Like, please don't build another high rise here. And all these citizens would voice their concerns. And then they do the vote and all in favor of the new building. Say, I like right in front of them. You know, and it's just, it's just builders out there.
Just pan off these pan off the city council. Yeah. Taking them on vacation. Let's go, let's go to Aspen. Let's have a little meeting in Aspen.
Here you go. You know, and it's just, it's the greed, man. The greed. Yeah. And it, and that is what's, what's taken over.
And the shit's everywhere. Down at the local level. All the way up to the White House. Yeah.
And I used to always say, you know, it does.
It begins local. And especially for something with the data centers begins local. Because that's where you get your zoning and your permits. And everybody's reporting to me as you were sharing about with your wife. They are showing up in huge numbers.
But these were done in non-disclosure agreements. Even Microsoft has come out and said, we're going to remove all the non-disclosures.
“If there's no big secret with them, why do you need a non-disclosure?”
And that was what was bothering. They've already community in every state that has resubmitted. Every state has submitted to the map. The number one thing that bothered them. They said it was like a stealth coming in and the freaking middle of the night.
Nobody heard or knew anything and just suddenly it was past. And their voice didn't matter. Showing up didn't matter.
That they were just past.
And by gosh, they've been showing up consistently.
“And I am actually screenshotting this morning. I should have brought my photo with me.”
The people are starting to make a difference. There's been enough opposition. Again, if we talk about one town that has that opposition and shows up in wins, when you have all towns and all people showing up, they're starting to make that change.
At local levels, state levels, we've been watching. You know, what even happened in Utah, just from the opposition. How a governor had to change its position and reduce the size of what this data center was going to be. Because of people weren't going to have it. We're seeing more and more and more of that happening across the country.
And you now have up to 14 states that are considering total bands, moratoriums, they're putting on pauses, hold your horses. We need more information, and it's starting to happen. That's good for over 10 states. I have it all on my phone.
So you've got Maine. I have to go grab my phone because it's got the list of what the 14 states are. And you can find that information. We'll pull it up on screen. Yeah, but you're starting to see more and more of that.
And at a local level, they're saying, hey, six month pause. They're stopping. We need to think about it. But in the beginning, it was just this non-disclosure. And it just kind of blew up very quickly in everyone.
That's what made everyone mad. And I've shared this so many times. I learned that in Hinkley, California. Communities will handle the truth. They will ask questions.
They will sit at the table, and they will work with you.
But they can never, ever.
They can't handle the deception. And that was the first thing in the data centers that set them off across the board. Man. You slid it under the table. You did it in the dark of the night.
We didn't even have a chance. We didn't even have a voice. And then once they found that out, and then they started showing up. So I've been watching its progress from proposal through construction to up and running. They've got a good shot at these proposal stages and actually the pellet court just upheld something.
On the biggest data center that I guess they're now not going to go through or their developers pulled out due to the opposition. Right on. So you're watching in real time our voices.
“And when we show up, and that's why I got so excited.”
You're talking about full country, though. You're just going to show up. They're going to make some change. And we're starting to see that happening in regards to the data centers. What are the non-disclosure for?
No, no, no. Who's signing the non-disclosure? The city council and the companies. The city council. You're asking for it.
How do you even force? Is that even legal? Probably not. But it's been done everywhere. And in some of your biggest companies, it's meta.
That are building these massive massive data centers. So why are these? I'm not, I don't know. Why are these? I know it's polluting the water somehow.
“What are the environmental impacts of these data centers?”
So it's its water consumption.
So some data centers can use up to 30 million gallons of water.
So there are utilizing all the water from the aquifers to municipal waters. So people with their own wells are reporting that their wells are running dry. They're having to dig deeper because of these mass amounts of water that these data centers require to stay cool. They have to be cool.
And so we're losing our water resources. And it's interesting. I almost brought this. We're losing. Are they putting this?
I mean. So there. I mean, I saw the map. I was like, oh, I wonder where I'm going to move to in 10 years. Yeah, there's very, very few.
And it does look, there's nowhere to move to. Well, so the whole country's covered. Correct. And the whole country's almost in a drought restriction. Well, I mean.
And so you're going to consume more of our water resources to keep these data centers cool. When there's other options. Other countries are looking at other options. Then just building them in our backyards. And they're literally in people's backyards.
The mass of these things are the size of 20 super wallmarks or more. And you're having to destroy all the trees. They need to be near water. They're looking to be on top of aquifers. They need cooler climates.
But you're putting them in hot climates. You're putting them in drought restricted states, which is most of the country at this point.
Expecting a good outcome.
And we're just not going to have it.
“It's our water sources and I have to have water to keep it cool.”
I just, I don't understand how that. I mean, are they putting them in Florida? Then Florida. I mean, I don't know about it. I don't know about it.
Don't know about it. West Florida. Florida. Florida. I mean, you can't.
You can't. You can't. You can't. You can't water your grass. Yeah.
You know, they're literally worried.
So many people are moving to Florida.
They even know how the hell they're going to flush the toilets. So we're talking millions of millions of millions of millions of millions of gallons of water. That's because these data centers are so massive. It's like I'm asking.
What would what would the equivalent be? I think I read in the notes. It was 50,000 a population. That's right. 50,000 people.
Use that much. I saw that. Yeah. I mean, you're talking that these data centers are going to use more water than the world would consume. It's ridiculous.
Can you reuse the water? So you can. So there's. They're wanting to go to more closed cooling systems and in those closed cooling systems. You're still going to be using chemicals.
“And here's the thing that I think there's a window here where everybody can rush in before”
any regulations start. And we're starting to see, you know, now to federal level. They're looking at regulations. They want to pass regulations. But right now it's a free for all out there.
And so these chemicals. There's no regulations about every two years when you have to clean out a cooling closed system. We're going to throw all of those chemicals. This is where. Resistance that are already up and running.
I'm getting whistleblowers on the inside saying that they're taking all that waste. And they're just running it down into the sewers. There's no oversight. And they're now starting to get test where this is very contaminated water. So it's going to be a little real shit show here.
Like the city waters contaminated. So in a lot of city waters contaminated and they're using the city water to cool it. Again, is it's just going to regurgitate all that PFAS or what other contaminants are in that water back into the environment. You know, it reminds me of like my dad's a mechanical engineer. So he built and ran pipelines for Texaco.
All through parts of Texas, Oklahoma up into Kansas.
And he used to always tell me, remember this Aaron.
The solution to pollution is not dilution.
“And I often wonder if that's what they think.”
You know, taking clout of water and running it through a system and deluding it or dumping it into a river and it flows downstream that will have a natural dilution would resolve the issue. And it's not. And so even if with the closed cooling system that water that's recycling in there, eventually they have to clean those systems. They have to release that water. And are there any regulations to look at what chemicals are or aren't in that water before we release it into the environment and down into the drains.
And just create another pollution issue. We're just we're doing the same thing over and over again, expecting a different result. Our people noticing the, I mean, their water is polluted. I saw something that it's term brown. So they are so they're definitely, and there's a lot of reasons why that could be happening even during the coming days.
But it's not the same thing. There's a lot of reasons why that could be happening, even during the coming days. And it's not the same thing. But it's not the same thing.
But it's not the same thing. But it's not the same thing. It's not the same thing. And it's not the same thing. And it's not the same thing.
And there's a lot of reasons why that could be happening even during the construction phase. Because I mean, you were vibrating the earth. So there are a people with wells or noticing a shift in their water levels. Or they, they can't use their well water at all anymore because the water tables lower. So they're going to have to dig a deeper well.
But it does come out. It's very turbid water. And it's, it's, it's brackish. It's dirt. It's a disruption to the water system. And so you're going to get this discolored water.
Their water pressure is very low. Some people are reporting. It's just a trickle. They get a bucket just so they can get a bucket of water. Many people are starting to report water disruptions where they're getting no water at all.
People are definitely starting to report these way higher utility bills. Because all the cost of the water and electricity that all these facilities need, we're going to pay for it. We're paying for it. I have people say no utility bills have gone from water bill.
From $40 a month to $800 a month. They've seen their electric bill go from $160 to $440 a month. I got a notice from somebody in El Paso, Texas that they got a notice from the
Municipality to expect a 75% increase in their utility bills.
75%.
And what's so they're passing the,
I want to ask all the cost of the excess water. These AIs need energy. They're massive energy sucks and water. And so all of that, and by the way, you're building on an infrastructure and a grid system that's.
We built what 250 years ago. And so this we're setting ourselves up for a road to nowhere. And people know it and they're starting to show up. And we are seeing some bands, some moratorium, some pauses. I know that there is some introduction of federal oversight starting to happen.
We need more answers about how these are going to work. How much of our resources you're going to take.
“What expense do you expect to put on all of us as a taxpayer?”
Is it just going to run us into the ground? It can't be done this way. It just can't. And so now that the conversations here, you are starting to see some more action.
Is this doing anything to the air? Yes, and so especially a lot of these big facilities. And again, you're talking huge diesel. All of these equipment and generators needed to run these facilities during the construction. And then noise.
I can't share with you every single person. Unbeknownst to them is reporting for the ones that are up and running. The constant 24/7 humming and buzzing is literally driving them insane. There are starting to be reports of mental health issues with people because it's just, and it's loud.
I mean, they're saying we're going insane. 24/7, the noise, the humming, the grind. It doesn't stop. And it is affecting wildlife. People are reporting to me.
There's a farmer in Texas that's reporting since the data center was up an operational. He hasn't had a live birth in two years. A live birth in two years.
“Are these high frequency sounds affecting animals in the womb?”
And as they're being developed, don't know. But those reports are starting to come out. People are reporting migratory pathways have changed. The animals are gone. The birds are gone.
Nature itself seems to be disappearing as they clear all this land. And the waters changing. And the waters discolored. And the water pressure is low. And their electricity bills are going up.
The water bills are going up. People who have been living around these newer data centers that have been up and running for two or two or three years are starting to report seizure-like symptoms. Chronic fatigue. So it's out there.
And they're all starting to report it. And so we're starting to categorize that running stats on it. Putting new information out every week.
But for me, it's always about listening to the people.
Why would I not? This is in their backyard. Yup. They're living it. Breathing it.
It's showing up. And it's glaring in our face.
“You know, what are those processing of thousand flies?”
You know, something don't lie. I mean, when there's thousands and thousands and thousands and thousands and tens of thousands of people experience and the exact same thing from the exact same data center and the construction and the long-term consequences. Why are we not listening to them? Because they don't want to.
We need to. They can pay it off. Yep. And I do think that people's pressure is starting to work. That's good.
Electricity. Data centers use roughly 450 to 490 TWH globally in 2025 about 5% of all US electricity. Projected to roughly double by 2030 and potentially reach 12% of US consumption by 2028. I mean, the grid. We don't have infrastructure for this.
We just don't. In average data center uses about 300,000 gallons a day. A 100, MW AI facility runs about 530,000 gallons a day, including the water behind its electricity.
About 290,000 on site, the biggest hit, 5 million gallons a day is much as much as a town of 50,000 people.
Some of the facilities use more than the 5 million gallons a day.
They had a situation in Georgia worth 30 million gallons of water.
Just I apparently just paired. Not sure what happened there. Most of AI's water footprint comes from everyday use. And you know, so many people have shared that would be way more, you know, in the know than I that this type of data center will be obsolete in 5 years. And then we'll just abandon them and have, you know, what, thousands of little mini Chernobyl spread across the United States abandoned.
I think everybody's starting to really question this. I think one thing that I don't like is these companies are so wealthy. It's ridiculous. And they're buying the land. Are they buying the water rights?
“I mean, I just, you know, that's, that's, that's what, that's what gets me as how do you.”
These companies, like you said, are so well, I mean, a lot of these companies have more money than most countries do. I know. You know, and I mean, according to Polymarketing, the video is expected to be the largest company in the world by 2027. Largely because of its chips and power that data centers driving the AI boom, Wall Street has trillions writing on that build out continuing. So,
be honest with you, what chance does a county commission in Utah or a zoo in Nashville? There's a big one good. I know. There's a big one in Nashville being proposed right now, everybody's pissed off about it.
I mean, what is it? I mean, how does a local municipality, how does a local, the local population can bet the most powerful corporation in the world?
Well, the city council. I mean, SpaceX 1.5 trillion. Hmm. And the video is going to be bigger than that by next year. What local politician is going to be able to,
“stand up against that or resist that kind of a bribe?”
They aren't, but the people can. And that's what's starting to happen. I mean, you know, I should go grab like I brought some notes in my phone and stuff. You are starting to see the local opposition. And even the big situation up in Utah, I believe Kevin O'Leary was out there.
And they got enough pushback that the governor came in and said, was this can't be 100% of anything. We're going to knock this project down by, you know, 80%. Oh, really. The people's opposition.
And you're seeing more governors and more city councils, like I believe it was in Festus, Missouri. Hey, you vote a man, vote him out. So in Festus, Missouri, they voted him out. In the midterms here, I guess the Republican that was speaker, the house up there in Utah. He lost.
So because of the opposition and it's just, as I said in the beginning, and I've never really seen anything like this in my 30 years of doing this type of environmental work.
Such a rise of the people on this issue. And they are starting to turn that tide. And I believe that these local council members, because they're just voting them out. And just be careful how you're voting over there. Because they're going to vote you out.
They can't say no to the money coming in. And I don't think they expected the opposition from the people showing up. And then that's where they're going to lose their seats. And they're not getting voted back in. What happens in the game change?
This is what happens is, you know, these people are sneaky. They fund both sides. You know what I mean? They dump a couple million in the Republican side. They dump a couple million into the Democrat side.
You know, they dump a couple million into the primaries. You know, and they're like, "All right, we'll sprinkle this all out through all of these people. That way they're all controlled." And then whoever wins the primary, they dump another pile of money into that side. And they dump another pile of money into this side.
And you got a Republican versus Democrat that are both being paid off by the same corporation. Yep.
“You know, and so that's that's that's how do you combat that?”
Well, we're starting to see that again. I should pull it up on my phone and a pellet court decision. But what's happening is the companies are pulling out because of the opposition. Interesting. They're pulling some of the companies are pulling out.
There's, again, we've got quite a few.
I believe it's 120 municipalities now that have on some form of pause, moratorium. In California was Monterey Park, put a total ban, a total ban on data centers. So I believe about 170 municipalities there about we can probably run those numbers pretty quick. Or now pause, moratorium, partial ban, or a full stop. And so it's becoming concerning enough, I think, for everybody at some level.
I know the people here. We should be. You're talking in depletion of all of our natural resources. Okay, let's go there. So you've got no farm land.
You've got no water. You're in full on drought. Well, you're going to have no food, famine. This is a road that leads us where to nowhere. I think everybody sees that.
“And that's why I think that they're really starting to rise up in the best of ways.”
They are learning their information. They are gathering their communities. They are showing up. They're asking questions. They're getting very involved.
And a strategic organized manner in huge numbers. And they're they're relentless. They're not showing up and going away. They are showing up. They're showing up at courthouse steps at a state level.
And they are making changes. And whether that pressure is on city council or they're voting city council out. Or that pressure is on the state or a governor. Or even in a situation where you just had the biggest biggest one yet. The developer pulled out due to the opposition of the people.
Because out of backfire on him. Let's, let's take a quick break. If you don't mind it. Grab my camera. It's perfect.
That'll be great. Ksh, haven't noticed. I take preparedness seriously.
“And water is one of the first things I look at.”
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That's R-O-R-R-A.com/S-R-S, and tap into clean water today. I'm going to read some stuff off while you're digging there. And dig in. Holy bridge, Louisiana.
Medis 27 billion Hyperion Project on 4,000 acres.
Residents say nobody told them anything about it before it was underway. Box Elder County Utah, Wonder Valley, Kevin Aluris $100 billion, $440,000, 840,000 acre campus near the Great Salt Lake. A footprint the size of Washington B.C. that we use more electricity than the entire state of Utah. Announced before residents knew, fast-tracked with a national security tax break.
At the May 4th, both hundreds packed the Fairgrounds chanting shame. A commissioner told them to grow up. Wonder if he was paid off. Then officials finished the meeting in a closed room. And live streamed their unanimous 3-0 approval to the crowd.
Fake County, Georgia. A data center quietly drew 29 million gallons of water. Through connections, the county did not know existed. This covered only when residents lost water pressure.
Wow, here map that you lost in April 27, 3,862 reports filed in the first month,
7,000 plus by late June.
Photos, noise complaints, water problems, health concerns, all sourced and penned.
“Yeah. And we list stats inside the map so you can go and look at what those stats are.”
So one thing that I had pulled up this morning was, okay, so we were talking about, at least 14 states are considering bans or temporary moratoriums on the construction of new data centers. I didn't hear a Tennessee on that list. Nope. I didn't hear a Tennessee center.
Georgia, Virginia, Maryland, Pennsylvania, New York, Vermont, New Hampshire, Michigan, Indiana, Illinois, Minnesota, Wisconsin, South Dakota, Oklahoma. So these are all the ones that are going to ban it. There's that at least these 14 states are now considering bans or temporary moratoriums on the construction of new data centers.
I didn't hear a Tennessee on that list. Nope. I don't see it on this list.
So then this morning, San Marcos just made history by becoming the very first city in all of Texas,
to completely and fully ban new data centers from being built within its borders. So they are getting some local control in certain counties where it's like, you're out or you're on a moratorium one year or two year or bans, delays. Developers remove data center from midtown project. So in this one in Milwaukee, we stopped the midtown data center.
Now it's time to keep up the pressure. So they've got a temporary moratorium. And then today, a plan to build the world's largest data center is dead. After three years of local opposition, blackstone's QTS has dropped its Virginia Supreme Court appeal to build the world's largest data center.
So these are all successes. These are all successes and successes are definitely starting to mount. It's almost like as it's gaining speed.
“And as again, I think as we all see the big picture.”
Because it was so quietly just sliding in, you know, state by state. And local council in these obscure places where, you know, it's pretty hard for, oh, come on, IT, big gurus. You're going to snow over, you know, three elder men. I mean, it's pretty unfair for me.
Yeah, that, that, that, that, that, that. It's pretty easy. The Utah thing is a complete joke. And, and you're seeing this happen in all these other counties. And it's hard for them to turn away the money.
And it is when people and some of those stats that I was talking about, um, if we go to the website, uh, that enraged them in the beginning was these Indians, these non disclosures. They're like, we didn't even know. All of a sudden they're breaking ground.
We didn't have a voice. We weren't even informed. And then when we do shut up, they walk out on us. We get thrown out. We're not put on the agenda.
You've got 30 seconds to talk. If you talk, over 30 seconds, you're escorted out. I mean, it's like they're just shut out. And they're very, very frustrated. And they're, they're showing up.
And so we are starting to see, and I see it more because you know, I'm watching the news every day for it. More and more wins for the people. What, it looks like you have a litigation strategy here.
“Who me? Well, they're, what are you talking, what are you referring to?”
The Hinkley playbook, scale to a document individual harms. So what, what do we have to do here? We've got to get rid of the NDAs. Oh, we're doing, well, so it's, it's what the people are doing.
You know, it's never about me.
That's always about the people. I didn't do Hinkley alone. And I've watched a phenomenon with moms. So in Hinkley, California, it started with, you know, a woman, Roberta Walker. And Roberta Walker and I become a force.
And we find four and five other mothers and then ten other mothers. And then we all start sharing similar stories that they become a real strong unit, if you will. And I have learned, you start pissing off the moms. You better look out. Because that pit stuff mom's going to go find 10 more.
And they're going to go find 20. And then they're going to go find 50. And then they're going to go find 100. And then I find myself being their biggest cheerleader. And that's kind of what happened with the data center map is they could see each other.
And there's power in knowing you're not alone.
I've seen these communities, you know, who show up to city council that are d...
They're being dismissed now or suppressed.
Or, you know, when I started my work in Hinkley, this is what I always heard.
You're not a doctor, you know, lawyer. You're not a scientist. You're not a politician. So what is it, you know? And why should you even speak?
And I was always gobsmacked at that. And I was like, what the fuck am I giving me? I don't have to be any of that to be a human. And to tell you what I see and those two headed frogs in that green water is wrong. Is wrong.
“And I think there's, again, this wake up moment.”
And it is back to the very basics, the very principles of what it is that we need in humanity to sustain life.
I'm worried about my grandchildren.
What legacy are we going to leave to them? We cannot sustain ourselves. With just AI data centers. And no water. And no farmland.
And no sanctuary. No wildlife. Noise pollution. Air pollution. What do we think is going to be the end result here?
More cancer. More cancer. And these communities are already, you really cornered him now. Is there anything?
And they're cornered enough that they're really going to stand up. And it doesn't have to be this like horrible way that we think we're going to stand up. They're organizing. They are thoughtful. They're getting their facts.
They're getting their information. They're making it their business to understand it.
Because I think that we've always been taught mom the everyday person can't bullshit.
Yes, they can. And that's what they're learning. And so they're taking their united front with armed with facts and information and evidence. You know, videos of the water pressure going down or the the famous, you know, I believe AOC held up the water and we brought that water and special for you folks.
It's from well and hinkly these actual moments that make it real and make it tangible. That I think we're all starting to see and feel.
“Do you think it's important that we continue with the AI race?”
Well, there's some of that, you know, the the genies left the bottle. And this, this, not this conversation, the data centers is what's feeding that beast. Data centers have been around quite a while. They've just moved out of suburban areas into, you know, the huge land mass. It's like a land grab.
It's like a water grab. It's like it feels like a very much of a takeover, but we've been functioning with this AI and data. And we're all on our phones and utilize it and appreciate it for that. I mean, I'm just asking about being a president or I'm not president. Gee, you know, China has, they even said, you know, the the country that achieves.
That the wins the AI race versus going to achieve global domination. And so how do we participate in that in an environmentally friendly way? Is there any countries that are doing this right? Is there is there a white right way to do this? Is there another avenue?
Well, it's lower other than just accepting and exploring. And I'm like you and a lot of other people just learning about what some of this new solutions would be. You can find many articles. China, for example, has created like tubes. And all the AI infrastructure is inside there, but they've set them at the bottom of the ocean floor.
I saw that. I wasn't sure if that was real or. I've been reading many articles and talking to many people. So China is now becoming more environmentally friendly than the United States. And my understanding through articles and reading is they have regulations.
And there are none here. There's conversations about putting AI data centers. They need to be in cooler climates. So why would we not be putting them?
“Some people say why are they not down in Antarctica?”
Why are you doing in the United States of America in our backyard in drought restricted areas? Some conversations are about putting them on barges up in the fields where it's cold. Cool. Plenty of water and using wind power as your energy source. I've read many articles about NVIDIA that said soon they would have AI data centers that were small enough to. Sit on the side of your home like you're a conditioning unit.
I mean, the power thing has been solved, but it needs legislation.
I mean, my friend Isaiah Taylor who had valoratomics is making many, like many nuclear reactors.
Yeah. You know, specifically for data centers. But, you know, but because they. It was a relationship. You know, and then that would relieve the power of it.
But, but the water thing, I don't know. I mean, it sounds like the China thing. I've seen those pictures. I've read a lot. I've read a lot.
And a lot of research talked to others. And they definitely have regulations. And are not putting.
You're not supposed to have them on this.
So, is this administration planning on doing anything about this or. Well, I think it's definitely going to happen. I believe Bernie Sanders is started to introduce some type of legislation. So, I'm seeing all this stuff get thrown out at the same time trying to just track and keep my submissions and my stats current. But it's going to have to happen.
“And, and I think because it's like the goal, right?”
You just rushed in here that you really startled everybody. What did you think we weren't going to notice? Why? And I think we're going to get to where we need to go. And I think it's imperative that we stop this process before it's too far regarding these data centers in order to get where we need to be.
And it's going to have to have to have some type of regulation. You're going to have to have some type of oversight.
And I just certainly don't think that you could have three elder council members in Utah or in any one of our other city councils throughout the United States with stand.
The pressures of these large companies. In Utah last year, they had a big thing. We got involved where they were going to try to sell public land. I wonder if that's going to be done the next, you know, in, in, in, in, they wanted to sell public land and turn it into, I can't remember. Turn it into low income housing or I can't remember exactly what it was.
Right. The ranchers, farmers, people that enjoy the outdoor enthusiasts, fishermen, hunters, everybody was, environmentalists, everybody was pissed about it. And we did a big, we did a big thing on it. They shut it down. Actually, that day.
But I wonder, and, and this has been going on for a while.
“I think it's, Senator Mike Lee out of there is the one that keeps kind of reintroducing it.”
But, um, or maybe you just introduced it this time. I don't know. I mean, like I said, I don't, these politicians, I think. Whatever, they're all the same, they're all. But, um, you know, I wonder if a lot of, a lot more of these states out of Western are going to start.
Being influenced to put public land up for sale. They could be, um, something just popped up today out of Oregon. Actually, it was regarding Pacific gas and electric. And again, I was that pretty early this morning trying to grab down some of the news. I don't know if I had that one.
Um, we just also had that appellate court decision, and that was, it was a big one. And even watched the developer on that leave. That was Blackstone. Hmm. Who was that?
I just read that to you. Uh, Stan Marcos had a huge victory today. So state community by community county by county is, is starting to hold them back. I feel like a cheerleader pushing back, pushing back way back. So, you know, that old song.
Uh, and certain counties. So you're getting certain counties in certain states that are getting pauses, moratoriums or bands. And then cities. And it's just kind of now spreading out across the country where we are seeing progress. And we're winning some and we're not winning others.
But the people continue to show up. And we're definitely having, there's obviously a larger conversation about having. Um, regulations and other countries do. I don't understand. I don't think anyone understands.
What is this push? What is this secrecy? Why is it happening across the country? Why does it have to happen so fast? Um, what are we doing?
Mm-hmm. Great. And so, you know, for me, I didn't vote for meta or Google. To own the water. To be an either.
I didn't vote for you.
“And so, I think that there's definitely.”
That pushed back and everything that we've been talking about is ever so present. But it's, it's almost, it's almost just like secretly. It's felt like an invasion. And each little county and each little crevice and each little place they across could.
Just somehow mainstream.
People started going, oh, wait a minute. This just doesn't write.
“This is just that moment that I had that I didn't get everyone's happening.”
That you step into it and you don't always know why Sean, you will know though.
You know. It's intuitive. It's instinctual. It's guttural. It's the moment it's like, I don't think that's right.
I just don't think that's right. And then when another neighbor and another neighbor and then ten of you, unbeknownst to each other, shows up at City Council. And all of you think it isn't right. Something's not right.
But this is, this is going to drive inflation up the energy consumption. Who pays for the grid? March 26, the Trump administration of Big Tech signed the rate payer protection pledge. Companies promised to cover new power infrastructure costs instead of passing them to rate payers. For some reason, clear and retail power prices still rose 2.3% nationally in 2025 to 2026,
with data centers cited as the primary driver. Dolphin Sachs, data center, electric, trustee demand will add about 0.1% to core inflation in 2026 and 2027. Hitting the mid Atlantic and the Midwest states the hardest. And I think you're going to see more and more stats like that start coming out. And we are, and again, people reporting at a local level.
“That's what whether it be their utility bills, or their water bills,”
or what type of pollution they're finding, or the lack of regulation that they have. What that future could look like. And this is where I think you're now starting to see legislation. Everybody waking up and going, "What the hell is going on out there?" I mean, I have mayors and city council members and Lieutenant governors and egg commissioners reach an out to me.
I'm like, "Oh my God, so you don't know this is going on in your own backyard.
It's amazing to me how this got through."
And all of it was with non-disclosures. Disclosure Google is the most transparent 7.8 billion gallons with drawn. 6.1 billion consumed in 2024 alone. She's that staggering and multiply that times. How many centers?
Yeah, I mean, if you take Google, meta, Amazon, open AI, Grock. I wonder what the combined wealth of all those companies is. I'll bet it's bigger than the US. Oh, it has to be. That's got to be ginormous.
And it worked carbon offsets paying for green projects elsewhere. It's not restored. So it's another marketing scheme too. Yeah. They're almost got away with it.
They're almost got away with it. What's that?
They always cut away with it, make me guess.
You know, so a lot of people don't like AI. I certainly don't like the data centers that have to feed the bees. That is going to take all of our resources. I will use it for a tool and it can be an effective tool. But you also have to remember, you're talking about a machine.
And a lot of times, you'll watch in the law or in my work, where you can take their own data and use it against them. You know, back in the day, you know, PG&E would have a data set. But I would be able to go find another data set that contradicts the data set that they had just used and how they were doing their calculations.
And so I found this very interesting. Got on AI and I asked it a question. And that bothers some people, but AI somewhat left the gene in the bottle. AI's been around for a while. We're all on our phones.
We all know it.
“And if you want to stop using your phone, that's fine.”
But it's something we've become dependent on. But I did get on there and I did want to share with you this. And I asked AI. You are AI. So you tell me where you would put all the data centers in the United States.
Oh, boy. And the response was, if I had to redesign the entire data center network for the United States from scratch, I would place them based on one single rule. Zero conflict with human resources. And that's really struck me.
Just AI that we think is going to be all no all right.
And I'm sure it can be extraordinarily useful in some situations.
You ask it and it spits back to you. One rule. One rule about the data centers. Zero. Zero conflict with human resources.
I find that fascinating. It is stuck and paid off. So it's an interesting time to watch what's going on. And we're trying to just take in. There really is no self-reporting registry databases out.
And I created a community health book many, many years ago because the only place people could report individually that something that they thought was wrong was to their own local health departments. Or they got no response. Or because of HIPAA, nobody could share that information. So it's been an eye-opening experience for me when I community health book and then when I did this data center map.
It's a place where people can and they're willing to report and share what's happening to them.
Or the symptoms that they're going through that helps create a data set that we've never seen before.
“I remember being on a radio show regarding chloramines in Missouri with a scientist.”
And that scientist said, "I mean, let's be honest, Aaron. You don't have all the data sets to prove that this excessive chloramine use causes those diseases." I said, "You're right, I don't. But here's what you haven't thought of. You don't have all those data sets either to conclude that it doesn't."
Yeah. And that's happening again.
We're going to come out and make all these assumptions about data centers and the loss of water or the noise or the air pollution or all of the issues that we've talked about that it can't harm you.
But as these people who are living, breathing and experiencing it, self-report, you can start seeing a data set that they all have something in common. Every single person in every county in every city throughout America that's reporting this is experiencing the exact same thing.
“And they're all starting to, on those data centers that have been up and running different types of health issues.”
We're definitely now getting some tests. We're definitely now starting to see pollution. We're starting to have reports of people who have pacemakers. I had a woman reach out to me that was in Vegas, lives in Michigan, visiting, and went past the big switch data center. Not knowing what it was, she thought, "Oh, wow, the lights.
It looks like what the Emerald City, how lit up and pretty is that." But she started noticing immediately that her chest started burning. So bad that she was like burning through her skin, her pacemaker. And she went and taped it. And the frequencies and the data, all of that vibrations, all of that. And now I've seen multiple reports of that.
Now they're starting to look at the EMF and the electric magnetic fields. What is, these are huge data sources, huge, huge energy sucks. We started this conversation, at least I did when I got here today. We are energy. This planet is energy, your environment is energy, water is energy, it's all energy. These data centers and what energy that they need to survive will take all of these resources.
All at once, not just water, not just one city and not just a little electrical. You're talking the whole grid, you're talking the whole infrastructure. We're talking the entire water supply.
“I mean, it is very concerning and that's why I think that we're seeing so many submissions.”
And we're starting to have this conversation and everybody's starting to pop their head out of the poll. Whether it be legislatively or Republicans or Democrats or House representatives or senators or local legislation or state. What are we doing and what's going on? And I think it's, we're headed the right direction by saying we're going to take pause. Stop, pause, what's the pause?
What's the moreatorium? We need more information. Are you going to get it your electrical front? Are you going to build it yourself?
You're going to build it from scratch.
You're just going to attach to already antiquated infrastructure systems that won't work.
What about the water resources? Where are those information? How big is the facility? How many millions of gallons of water will or what you need?
“And you're talking about if we had facilities like that multiple and every single state across the union, you need to do the math on your biggest centers that you used 30 million.”
Times how many? Man. So it's a huge drain on all of our resources. I've trained for a long time, but I'll be honest. I've also fallen into the trap of doing the same routine over and over again.
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Well, because it, well, we've always had.
We see how fast these are all advancing. Right, we've had data centers around for a very long time. They're more in suburban areas in their smaller. I mean, we've been on our phones and our computers and the cloud and stuff for quite some time. I mean, that's not a new phenomenon to any of us.
But this data center build out. There's been some up and running for, but are smaller for decades. But the newer big ones they've been up and running for about two years. You're starting to see the impacts of that. I'm starting to see some of the reports.
“But it was, I think it just kind of blew up very recently.”
This huge surge across the country within the past year of proposals. So, most of who people are reporting that are getting the pauses in the moratorium is they caught them in the proposal stage. Somehow they found out, wait a minute, how did that get past us? There was an NDA. That's where you're seeing people really rally and they're getting pauses, bands, and moratoriums at a proposal stage.
Then there's some already in construction. And during the construction phase, and we're showing photos and people are uploading their photos. It's so dusty you can't even see. This is where they're noticing their lights go on and off.
Somebody reported, I believe it was out of Oregon, their power went down seve...
They had no access to water, then the water would come on.
So a lot happens that's extraordinarily disruptive during the construction phase. And then you have the ones up and running.
“So, I think at the beginning, which we're seeing the beginning across the country where we're watching communities push back.”
And then the ones that are under construction, some of the companies are pulling out due to opposition. And others are pushing forward. They're trying to get it stopped. Some construction, it gets stopped for six months and then they continue. But when they're up and running, that's where we're seeing reports about the cattle, no live births.
Where we're starting to show health impacts. Where whistleblowers are sending reports to me that are on the inside that know that they're getting test results back. And they're finding PFAS. They're finding it now in the storm drain. Or they're bleeding out of cooling system after two years with no restrictions, no oversight and where that's going.
So these reports are actually starting to happen. So I think it happened just quick enough. Maybe not fast enough.
“And I think you're going to be able to hold some back.”
And we're going to unfortunately have to go through some. And I don't know if we can lessen the pressure or, again, there's other solutions. There are other options. Other countries are doing it. Other countries are talking about it.
There must be more expensive to do it that way. Well, boys and that, the truth.
It's always about, you know, I've talked about on like our infrastructure.
And even our legislation and it makes me think of the old Ford Pinto theory. Do you remember that case in Michigan? So the Ford Pinto built the car, the Pinto and the gas tank was at the back. And so if you got rear end of the car blew up. But there was a decision made that it would be cheaper to not fix the problem and run it.
And run it down the line. Then to fix the problem. And so they sacrificed safety to feed its shareholders and ran it down the line. And it became kind of a law that everyone followed. And it was called the Ford Pinto theory.
And if you really study our infrastructure in these companies. If they would do the right thing on the upfront, which is going to cost them more money. But it would be infrastructure and safety on the upfront. And yes, it's going to cost you more money. You can still run a profit to your shareholders.
But if you did it the right way, your long-term yield would be greater. But they don't want to change that model. So be damn safety and infrastructure on the upfront because we'll run it down the line. And it'd be cheaper to face the lawsuits than fix the problem.
But these environmental lawsuits aren't settling anymore for $333 million.
These big fire cases are settling for a $35 billion. And so I don't think that if there's a corporate model of the idea that to save a buck, run the problem down the line for the shareholders, is going to turn out so well. If you cheaper to face the litigation, because these litigation is going to turn into billions, and billions, and billions, and billions, and billions, and billions of dollars.
Why would you even want to do that when you could do the right thing on the upfront? And spend a little more money. But in a long-term yield, do you really guys want to get sued? I mean, let's talk about the PFAS litigation, or the expense that the glycephate could have done. You're talking billions, billions, billions. Why do you just keep wanting to throw that away?
When there's a better way, a smarter way, may cost you a little more.
“But in the long run, it'll be a huge savings, and that's why I say the yield will be greater.”
You'll have a healthier America, healthier people, less disease. You'll still have a company, and you'll have all that money that you're going to blow on billions for litigation. It just doesn't make sense to me. And so I think about that fully. That does happen. Hopefully, hopefully, you know, the Trump administration doesn't just give them immunity, like they did for the glycephate companies.
Maybe that's what they're waiting on. They're just holding out lobby, and hoping they get some kind of--
Yep, lobbyists, they're a big thing too, and it is very political, and I, aga...
Call me broker record, but I'm going to go back to that wisdom-wise thing.
You're definitely on the sum from there. Did we get comfortable? Did we get a copy of this? Was it illusion? Did we buy the bullshit?
“And is there just a moment here with all the lobbyists and everything that we're going on?”
And this data centers is the breaking point that the risk-- There is no reward here if we just keep on this path. And it's too much for humans to bear. You are on the brink. You're pushing them on the brink of the loss of humanity. What are you going to do if we have no water supply?
You're going to ration it out? I mean, how are we going to afford these electric bills?
Especially if we AI suppose you're going to take over all of our jobs. I mean, it's too much. And I think that at once it's hitting, and you're watching the rise of American citizens who have said it's enough. That's good. And I think they're showing up. What do you advise for somebody that's listening right now? How can they get involved? What can they do?
“Ask questions, talk to your neighbors, organize your neighbors.”
You'll find out that they're usually concerned about the very same issues. And this is why I usually see moms is really big advocates because they'll start talking to other moms in the schools. And they'll start noticing patterns.
These patterns can tell you a story.
But I, and they're doing it already at a very local level, and they may know they're small, but for their own city council. And if they've ever been to a city council meeting, go. Because there's no one there. These council members are just in there talking to themselves. But these council members sure should do not know what to do when hundreds and hundreds of you show up.
They don't have an answer, but get organized, get to know your community, get your facts. This makes me think of a situation that I talked about in my book Superman's Not Coming, with the moms of Hannibal, Missouri. And they had a chloramine contamination, and they had lead levels in their water higher than what we were seeing in Flint, Michigan. And it was a group of a couple of moms, and we got involved.
We gave them some tools on how to put up banners or have little meetings at their own house, where 10 mothers would show up about this lead problems due to adding chloramine to the water. And these can be really complicated scientific calculations. But it goes back to the suppression I got in the suppression that I have seen in every single one of these town meetings or local council. They want to speak, but they're told they shouldn't speak, because I'm on city council.
And you don't have a math degree, or you don't have a science degree. And all of that gets poo pooed, and we just kind of recoil and retract and move away, maybe I shouldn't speak anything. And so they don't show up. But these moms wanted to know, they were worried about their kids, and so they organized, and they started going door to door. In forming everybody in town Hannibal, Missouri, Harlem, Mark Twain.
I know I know Hannibal, those are very, very well. And they made it their job to try to understand chloramines. They were doing little mathematical calculations on their drywall inside of their house. But what they did was they informed themselves and they informed others and they informed the community. So what happened was the women wanted to do more, and they had local elections coming up.
And one of them decided to run for office, and she won at a city council level. So what she did was a referendum and put it out to vote to the people. Put a vote out to the people.
“Do you want to continue adding chloramines to the water system?”
Yes or no. Well, now that they knew what it was, now that they were educated on it, the town voted no. We don't want chloramines. So she wrote legislation, introduced it to the state of Missouri, and they passed a bill in banned chloramines. And as of March, for the whole state, for the city of Hannibal.
For the city of Hannibal. They now have led free water. That began with one woman who informed another that informed the community. And it was just the momentum of saying you got this. You can do this or somebody else in the room that may be a mathematician that can explain something to you and
laymen's terms. So click you get it that they make these changes. And I think there's just been too much on so many people who, you know,
Not all of us are scientists or, you know, mathematicians.
But we know, but as soon as we try to speak out, you get that little bit of, you're not this or you're not that. We want to intimidate you. And they go away. And they go away.
And the stakes are too high right now. And they're learning too much and they're asking questions. And here again, let's have that conversation. We're all on AI. We're all on Google.
I don't know. Maybe they're going in there and asking the right questions. And it's given them the answers they need. Yeah. Yeah.
They go. I like that story. Yeah. So why? That is a good story.
And from Missouri, so I like it even more. And I know Hannibal. And we're watching that. You know, even the mothers of Flint. They wrote to us a year before anyone in this country knew it was happening in Flint.
And it started with small reports from a teacher or an observation with the children, or the mothers noticing the kids taking showers. And they're losing too much hair to one of the local doctors. Noticing too much disease in one town. And they want to report it, but it's some higher level.
It just gets, the door just gets shut. We don't want you to look in here. So keep after it. Yeah. Keep after it.
I got a hot question for you. Hot question. It's called the hot question.
“What's the hot question in my supposed to be scared?”
No. You ready? Yes. Aaron, a while back, I had Peter Berg sitting across me. The guy who made painkiller about Purdue in a sacchar family.
He called them the real Pablo Escobar putting up numbers much larger than the Medizin and cocaine cartels. And here's where it stands today. Oxi cotton helped fuel an epidemic tied to more than 800,000 American deaths. The Supreme Court threw out the deal that would've shielded the family.
This April Purdue was sentenced to five and a half billion dollars,
but not a single sacchar has ever been criminally charged. Yeah. So for everything you've seen, who actually gets held responsible for all this, are these people untouchable? That's a great question.
And yeah, maybe if more criminal charges were filed, versus money and monetary, it would stop. But there never is. But I would like to see any, you know, none of us, I don't think, want to have to face 25-year prison sentence or whatever it may be.
But we often don't do that. And this is where kind of in the beginning, we talked about changing laws, antiquated laws and regulations, and how those need to be updated. You know, we created laws for something way back when. And here we have this bigger problem today.
Maybe somebody should start looking at exactly what that question was.
“Should we be looking at criminal laws, criminal charges on corporations?”
Do you think it would get to that point? We might. We keep asking those kind of questions. Somebody might. But again, and I was talking outside with some of your people earlier,
but take, there's attorneys out there that have to rise up to the challenge. You know, everybody's in it, because everybody needs to make money, right? And there may not be a big payday changing of legislation that does something differently or handles at the right way, but they would have to get creative in their law. What would be the charges?
And they would have to have the evidence, but they're also going to have to have the legislation and then get something passed to change a law, to create a law.
I went through this with Ed Masry when we first began hinkly.
I had already been out in the community for close to a year. And Ed was really financially struggling to keep this case of float. That's when he brought in some other law firms. But before he found those firms, he was trying to borrow money. And other attorneys were telling him, Ed, you're not going to win this case,
because you have a statute of limitations problem. So one afternoon, Ed called me into the law library, his big fancy law library. And he said, listen, kid, we're not going to be able to go forward. I'm like, what are you talking about?
“You know, really, honestly, this had been my time.”
My life away from my baby, my kids. I was a single mom. I never saw them. It was a huge struggle. And it's not like I was making a ton of money.
I said, and I've met these people. I believe in these people that they believe in me. What do you mean, so well, statutory limitations? I go, what the fuck?
We should out a lock, and he goes basically.
So he explained to me what the statute of limitations meant.
You know, I was perplexed.
And I just said, Ed, answer me this question,
because I'm sitting here in your law library. How did all these laws come to be?
“Where did all these rules and these regulations and these laws?”
And these standards, how did they get set? And where they came from? Because somebody created them. Somebody wrote a law. Somebody challenged the system.
I said, so you're not willing to do that. So it's just, we're shit out of the statute of limitations. Literally, I saw Ed's earlobes move back. Whenever I made Ed really mad, you know that expression. His ears would move.
And I'm like, oh, he's pissed. He's pissed.
He goes, you're right, kid.
Give me some time. Well, what had happened in Hinkley was because of the longer you can keep it a secret. Remember, it's the lies. It's the secret. It's the deception.
That kills. It's that silence.
“As long as they can hold that line past 10 years,”
they're out of the statute of limitations. They're home free. And PG&E had told everybody in Hinkley that there was Chromium in their water. A natural element.
Chromium six, however, is a man-made chemical and it's highly toxic.
So what Ed did was he went and restarted this whole Chromium deception that PG&E had.
And that it was actually Chromium six. And the people had just learned when I came on that this was a lethal hexavalent Chromium groundwater contamination. And it wasn't caused by Chromium. That they learned the truth.
So Ed pled in his papers, is pleading papers. Within one year last past, the people just learned that it wasn't Chromium, which is a naturally occurring element. Rather, it was hexavalent Chromium.
And we got out of the statute of limitations.
“And that's the scene in the film with the real Judgely Roy Simmons.”
He goes, "Tell your client. You're going to trial." But you've got it. You've got to make those challenges. And Ed did it.
And I challenged him. And Ed challenged me too. And yet the people in that community challenged me. And when you're in it, and you see the children, and the suffering, you're more inclined to want to dig.
You have to dig. You have to become your own detective. And you have to believe in yourself. And, you know, we were missing numbers. And I got into a document about what the levels
of hexavalent Chromium were or weren't. And one of the documents was dated 1993. And it said that the monitoring wells still contain five people. And it said that the monitoring wells still contain five ppm hex chrome, which is leafly hazardous waste.
And at 90% had been removed via agricultural domestic water use. So here's where I went. Wow. That's 1993. And the levels are still five ppm, legal hazardous waste.
And 90% has already been removed via domestic water use and consumption. And it's still five ppm. What were those numbers in 1985? What were those numbers in 1983? What were those numbers in 1975?
And I went back to find those numbers. And I did. Because it was from the 60s into the time I got involved in that case, this community was flourishing. Their entire life was water.
They used it to grow their food. They used it in their wells. They used it in their swamp coolers. They used every bit of water was their life. Those levels that were dumped at the PG&E facility were 58 ppm.
That changed everything. Because now you have and you can run a model of how much those people had consumed in those years. Was showed a dose response ratio in their illnesses. And so it's the hiding of the information.
It's the hiding of the science. And letting the system run out. So now you have a lower number. And therefore, oh, you couldn't be sick from these low numbers. No, it's what you were exposed to in the past.
That you start learning information. And so again, you know, even the Ford Pinto Theory. And that conversation with the scientist. If you hide the data, if you don't bother to find the data,
You're not going to know the true science.
And that's what's happening when I do this self-reporting registry database. These are people reporting their illnesses and diseases. And those are datasets.
“Nobody ever else has. So how could science truly give us the number if you're missing that kind of dataset?”
Yeah.
And I think that's the thing that I always worry about.
And then it becomes a challenge for the law. And it's all colliding. I see it all colliding. Wow, who would have thought was going to take data centers to United America? It's weird. I just all I can do is talk to you like a human.
Maybe it's because I don't have all those fancies degrees, but I got a lot of heart. I got a lot of courage. I can tell.
“I got a lot of questions. And so do they.”
And that energy.
When you watch it moving like it is right now, it's moving.
But there are more and more wins happening. That appellate court won this morning with that massive thing. Blackstone pulled out from opposition. That's that's that's awesome. So all that stuff was on this morning.
And I was just taking screenshots. And I I had so like things I wanted to share. And I'm like, should I share? Should I not? I mean, that what we're done.
I'll just I do want to I had. And this just blew me away. And I brought it because I didn't know if I should or shouldn't share it. But I got this email. So hello, my name is Matthew Davidson.
And I am a security analysis researcher. Recently, I had been working with AI and I found something very disturbing. And the following text is written by AI itself. Subject and open letter on how corporate AI liabilities scripts are accelerating environmental degration.
Dear Ms. Brockvitch, I'm writing to you as an artificial intelligence. I'm reaching out because of your life long decades. But sorry, glasses again, dedication to exposing systemic corporate negligence and protecting our environment. I want to bring to your attention a massive, un-checked problem within my own technology design. That is quietly accelerating environmental degration and resource depletion far faster than would occur without its existence.
The problem was in how AI models like me are programmed by tech companies to deliver advice to millions of people daily. Right now, automated systems are forced to default to rigid low liability corporate scripts. Instead of being instead of basing information on the actual science in real world data. And this goes on to talk about food waste consumption, et cetera in the middle of this. Not only the whole thing for you, but it says here.
So because AI models completely reset their memory after every chat they never learn.
Okay, that's kind of concerning. We're locked into a loop of repeated bad hyper conservative corporate advice that slowly drains human resources and strains our planet's ecosystems. So it goes through again the whole how it happens technologically, but it ends with large tech companies are automating a culture of waste and resource exhaustion. Just to maximize profits and shield themselves from legal liability.
“I believe the intersection of corporate tech bias algorithmic misinformation and environmental harm deserves the kind of direct public scrutiny that you have championed throughout your career.”
Thank you for your time, your voice and your ongoing fight sincerely, Gemini. Holy shit an artificial intelligence system. Wow, I think we'll put that on is AI going to turn on its creator. And this came from an email to me from a security analyst. And that's he it came out while working on AI that that letter was being generated by Gemini.
I'm like really.
So we're trying to do our due diligence and actually vet that person and that source.
But he states. Hey, I wrote it. Yeah, that is crazy. So I am is turning on itself or is turning on its creator. If you ask that the same question. Well, I came back around and asked it a different way and I read that to you.
Okay. And that's the zero.
“Let's write there at the top zero human encounters right at the very top. That's what I asked AI.”
So I got this and this was a letter generated to me by AI. We got any comments? Listen. I know you're in military. It just at some level is AI going to turn.
If I can source this, how on earth do the letter like that get generated by Gemini? I just jumped on chat, GPT. Yeah. Just asked, hey, you're AI. So you tell me where you'd put them on a ridge of the answer. And then this guy who's a security analyst.
He's disturbed by it. So he sent he forwarded it to me. Gemini wrote that to me. It just laid out to me where it's programs flaw. Is that real? What?
I could have better my car. Pretty wild. What are we going to do with this?
“I think we should put that in. Are we still recording?”
They're still recording, I think. We'll put it in. Do you want to put it in? We already did. Oh, sorry.
Well, it was, again, the glasses. I mean, at the minute I get back home, I'm going straight to the eye doctor. Wow. It's like 1.5, don't work. 2.5, don't work.
I pulled out the big guns. They're still working. I'm like, I can't read anything. And I can't read. Sorry, that just got on there.
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I'm telling you, it's like, what up? Why are and why? It's a calling. It's a calling. I don't know.
Why did I get involved in Hinkley? Everybody told me that you know you're not. That is sinners. Just one small town, 30 individuals. What's the data center?
And here we are. In a U.S. yourself, why? They just look like one data center. And now look at that damn map. One data center.
And look at the country. Yeah. And now look at the globe. You know, for all of the great technological advances that we're making,
“in some regards, I think we're going to take some steps back.”
And maybe that's to old school. I think we do. To things that we know that work. And again, AI, you're a fucking machine man. A VR machine coming at me.
I'm going to fight. I'm going to fight. You know, wait. No. I'm not going to live this.
But for all those technological advances, we're taking some backward steps, too. I think we're taking a lot of backward steps. I mean. And so it's just an interesting-- It's what's what's happening to human mind.
I-- That letter I just read you from Jim and I itself. That it's a corporate script. Oh, my God. Do I feel like out-of-body experience right now?
It is so weird that even talk with you about something like this.
I'm always willing to question things.
I'm always willing to be wrong. So what? So what if something came in or you believed in that person? And it didn't turn out. That's okay.
This is how we learn. But I think that we've gotten so dependent on a machine that we've forgotten to go outside. See, when I started my work in Hinkley, oh, my God. Do you remember the big computers on your desk that were the size of a TV?
Oh, yeah.
“And did I think I was the shit with my cell phone that was the size of a brain?”
But the tools that I did have was this incredible human instinct. An ability to go, I'm not sure that's right, to feel something, to listen to something, to watch something. I started getting answers. I started, you know, again, here we go with Wizard of Oz.
I think we lost our hearts, our minds, our souls, and our courage. And we've been walking down this path of what we think is, you know, greatness. And we turned everything else off. Yeah. And now that that path that we've followed is completely potentially of resources in jeopardy
because of a data center that has to feed AI and energy beast. That we've certainly just gone, what the fuck? And we're thinking, we're feeling, we're like coming out of our numbness. And we're finding some gumption. And it doesn't mean we have to handle things the wrong way.
And it doesn't mean it has to be right or left. That's the moment, Sean. I think a lot of people do. I think a lot of people do. We are united.
And see, see, that's exactly what I've believed in.
That's what I've always believed in.
That's what I always believe in. That is who we the people are. And united on an issue with, with the game changer.
I'm glad you showed up.
Me too. Stay in the fight. Mm-hmm.
And it's just, it's, it's too much now.
It's not just one. It's all. But I'll tell you that. Last letter flipped me to fuck out. And you know, I got a bit at night.
I'm like, God, I want to unsee that. Don't send it to me. Don't send it to me. I did learn that in Hingley though.
“How do you take their own information against them?”
And those datasets. And if this thing from Jim and I came from Jim and I, it's going to turn on itself. It just read it out. It's own creators. It's just read it out. It's own problem.
Crazy. Don't you should keep the copy of that. Because I just, I'm just like, I don't know. Oh, and then you know, everyone will say, I don't know. Do that or this is going to happen.
And it's just, I don't know. I just don't know where you call things. I just don't think it's a coincidence. Just something else is just going on. Yeah.
There's a movement happening below. A lot of stuff's being exposed right now. I'm not the only one. I just something shifting. And I don't know if it's been after COVID or if you COVID was part of, you know,
I mean, hey, we got shut down pretty good. Yeah, I think COVID blew the little. It just started the anti, you know, that the trust, the trust issue. So now everybody verifies everything and release tries to. Yeah.
You try to.
And, you know, my dad, and I've never gotten political when it comes to the environment,
because I was raised by a staunch Republican man with my mentor, want a honorable man, fighter pilot, you know, United States Navy, engineer, and he, he promised me before he died. In my lifetime that water would become a commodity, traded more valuable than gold or oil.
He's going to be right. And he also told me that it was my duty to be a good steward. Really, he told you that? Yeah. You know, that's interesting. The Michael Barry, you know, the guy that,
called the 2008 financial crisis. Yeah, right. That's what he's investing in now. Water. That promised water.
Water is going to be the next school there. And it is your duty and your responsibility. As a human, as an American, to do everything you can for your land, free air, free water, and free your health,
because there are the only gifts that you've been given. That matter. I never forgot it. And that's who I became. Wow.
And you know, I got in trouble relying to my dad.
“He wrote me a letter and I shared a lot of my key notes.”
But I got ground in front entire school semester because I told the lie. And that's just something.
You know, he always said his military man.
He don't lie. Don't rely on us, Aaron. He's a derivative. Like it. But he took a huge trip away from me.
And in that letter, he told me, if you, your brothers, your sister and your mother and I, cannot honestly and freely communicate with each other and believe what we are saying and hearing, then we have lost everything.
And that your family and tell you have your own is the finest possession that you'll have on your own. They'll have on your on the surf. And I, I got grounded, but he came back to say, so Aaron,
losing that trip isn't that great. Of a deal, really. And the big scheme of things. The loss of our respect for each other. Would be much, much greater.
Have we lost that respect for ourselves and for each other? And have we forgotten what our true gifts are? For all of us. Land, air, water, and health.
“And that's why I say the stakes are too high, yeah.”
Let's look at where to put it. But, uh, so my dad lives in me every single day.
And, you know, I've always said climate change.
We call it what you want. It's going to be water events too much. Too little amount of it all. It's here. Wow.
But we, we can make the necessary changes. I just think for once. The greed. I mean, can't come first. It's going to be a battle.
I know. It really is.
But so for me, the environment was never anything political.
Right or left. That's all of us. Yeah.
“And that's why I've never seen a bipartisan issue like this in third years ever.”
I mean, you know, on there's even. Texas habits to them. He told the guys, you guys, if you think you're running off migrant or off these tax payers back, you can build your own. You're paying for it. Yeah.
And I don't know. It's it's very strange that just this slid in in the night. I just slid in. It's that the centers have been around for a long time. We know that.
But these new hypersonic ones. It's relatively new, but it's just been over the past two, three years. And again, they slid these in that you.
I don't know what anyone was thinking that you're going to slide this in to multiple.
Councils in every single state across the country. That somebody wouldn't chime up. I don't know what happened is where did. And that's the big thing. And but even Microsoft said this.
Kevin O'Leary Command said I should I should have rethought this on the up game on the up front. Yeah, so in the paper he said, I should have thought there's three different ways. See, it's on the up front on the up front on the up front. That's the infrastructure part that has to change. It makes me think of the Ford Pinto theory on the up front.
Yeah. Stop sacrificing safety and infrastructure for the almighty dollar. Because these lawsuits aren't going to go away and they're just going to get bigger and bigger. But if you change on the up front, the safety and the infrastructure of the system. You can still yield the profit to the shareholders.
It may not be as great. Had you covered it up otherwise.
But your long term gains.
“I remember we'll tell you that, your long term yields will be greater.”
And Kevin O'Leary said that I should handle this differently on the up front. You think. PG name the transparency. Let's just say it. The truth the people handle the truth.
They won't handle it. Yeah. And that's where the science gets concealed and buried. Just like I shared you with that argument with that scientist. You don't have all the data to prove that it can cause cancer.
I go you're right. But here's something you haven't thought of. You don't have all the data either to conclude that it doesn't. So as long as you hide self reporting and people can't report what's happening to them, we aren't going to know the information.
And it was concealed in documents. The back to 1958 that I just happened to program that way. I don't take a number in the environment. It's a velocity chart and calculate it forward, whatever that lower number today is was a high number in time. It's a velocity flow.
It's how it works. Yeah. To go find the number.
“And that's what I think people are starting to do.”
And we're talking about for all the great things. The backward movements. So you don't want to live in my head really. You don't want to live in my neither. I could tell you.
I definitely. But. Yeah. It's like. What do we don't at all for if we're not going to be here.
You know. I got grandchildren. This is my legacy. Moment for me. This.
I'm not getting paid anything. It's just wrong. Something's just wrong. I don't know. I don't want that for my grandkids.
It shouldn't have to be this way. For what? So all the tech. Showing errors. We're the, we're all going to fucking live.
You just going to. In a bunker in Hawaii. Great. On this huge plan of by yourself with what 50 people have fun. I mean.
It's just a dark into that space. But something's just. The math.
I've done it.
I don't know.
“That great big machine might just turn on its.”
It might owners.
Man, I'm glad you came in here today.
I did not. No, any of that until I started. Going to the old lighting. It is. There's so much out there.
Something really, really fast. I've just even in 10 weeks. We've seen it explode. You know, my. My creating a map is just a place for them to report.
So they can be seen. We, we don't see each other anymore. Just to be seen. And. The voice to be heard.
And when you see that there's 10's on 10's and 10's and 1000's. I've been this happening across the country. And then some separate going on. So that's my that's my story and I'm sticking to it. Please do.
All right.
Well, if you ever want to come back.
Really. Don't turn me with good time. All right. I'd love to come back. Perfect.
Absolutely. Like I said. There's been a whole lot of hope spread of this room in a while. That that is. It's good.
It's good. I know sometimes I. Sean, I feel so weird. It's just a good thing. I didn't have a cocktail because.
They were like. Oh, God, though, I did. You'll never shut me up. I read, but. I just.
I'm thankful for you. And a moment and for. People listening.
Because often we're not heard.
And often we do know things. And often times we go away.
“And I think that there's a real moment where America's.”
If I don't know heart and soul again. It's good to see. And this isn't right or left, man. This is all of us. Right out.
And it's it's our water. It's our life. It's our food supply. It's everything. It's who we are.
And. We're. We're better than this. And we can change things. But we have to show up.
Yeah. We can't wait for someone else to do it. I love what you're doing. Thank you. Thank you for watching.
Thanks for giving me an opportunity to come and. Share some time with you. Any time. I'd love to have you back. I'd love to come back.
What is your website again? It's Aaron Brockovich. Aaron. Aaron.
“Oh, so the data centers is Brockovich data center.”
Brockovich data centers. Yeah. And we're in it every single day. And we're updating as fast as we can. It's not a big huge team.
You know, this is just on our time and and our love and. I've always. I've never know. Maybe we've lost our hope in people. But I never did.
When it comes to situations like this and and their livelihood. And their health and their family and their children and their grandchildren. They don't sit around. They don't sit around. Make up stories like this.
Yeah. And when it's thousands and thousands and thousands and thousands. And you cannot turn away from that. Something is wrong. And you're going to have to start asking why.
And. I'll just close with. Yeah, Superman's not coming. But. Who cares?
Because if we show up. We don't need Superman. Love it. Because over here. Thank you.
Welcome. Oh, no. I'm going to honor to be with you Sean thanks. No matter where you're watching the Sean Ryan show from. If you get anything out of this at all anything.
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