Big Data Is Wasting Water To Create A Crisis
Water, Water Everywhere, But Not A Drop to Drink
Remember when I made a viral video exposing the green lockdown agenda? It was perhaps the most popular video I ever made on TikTok in terms of reaching people. Here’s part one:
As you can see for yourself, the World Business Council for Sustainable Development (which includes pretty much every major corporation in the world) endorsed an article written by Mariana Mazzucato about the need for “climate lockdowns” to decrease carbon emissions. They specifically compare these to the COVID lockdowns, saying that federal health authorities would unilaterally impose a ban on oil drilling, limit the consumption of red meat, and curtail gas powered vehicles, just like how they forced people to wear masks, stay indoors, etc. This isn’t a conspiracy theory. Green Agenda websites openly support this policy and take this advice seriously.
But those lockdowns never happened. Nobody is talking about them. It almost seems like it was there was no danger of this authoritarian Green takeover in the first place. But that’s because we exposed it in real time. They quietly reorganized and decided to take another route: to exacerbate their “crisis” using “capitalism” until basic resources like drinking water run dry. It sounds ridiculous today, but the warning signs are everywhere. Don’t forget the key line of the Climate Lockdown philosophy:
“To avoid such a scenario,
we must overhaul our economic structures
and do capitalism differently.”
You see, the real point of their scam is to entrench a socialist authoritarian technocracy run by Green Agenda ideologues, who can solve the rampant problems of the “capitalists” and bypass the free market altogether, just as health officials shut down the world for a fake pandemic.
In the problem-reaction calculus of social engineers, it’s not good enough to wait for a crisis. Yes, temperature and weather models are wildly inaccurate, with endless propaganda about a climate emergency that simply isn’t happening, but wasting natural resources is a very real problem they can get involved in, if they tip the scales with their regulations. And they are.
The unchecked wasting of resources is essential to hurrying up an artificial collapse of modern lifestyle. Access to fresh water—which is essential not only for everyday drinking, but also farming—can theoretically become competitive to the point where only government-subsidized mega-corporations can afford to buy it, while the rest of us are screwed. When everything dries up, only the richest will hydrate.
Bottled water
I hate few things more than bottled water being shipped around the world to be sold at supermarkets for profit. It’s a egregious business model of waste, a massive scam, and one of the worst examples of mindless consumption imaginable. 60 million bottles of water are discarded every day in America, and I don’t understand why. I suppose that local water regulation makes tap water undrinkable for many, but I also see so many stupid, lazy people buying cases of bottled water when regular tap water is good enough. I even believe that the “don’t drink the tap water” conspiracy theories are artificially fueling the bottled water industry; as if Nestle has your best interests in mind.
Buying bottled water because your town’s local supply sucks takes pressure off the government to fix their systems. 21,900,000,000 bottles of water per year, paid out of pocket by individual people, means hundreds of billions of dollars of profit by these corporations. Why? Just so that you don’t have to fill up your own bottles? Just so that a town doesn’t have to install water fountains and keep them functioning?
Rivers, lakes, streams, and the underground aquifers can actually start to dry up thanks to the bottling industry, lowering the water table and creating droughts, which hit farmers hard. They have been forced to ration water while corporations like Nestle are allowed to bottle as much of it as they like.
“I drink your milkshake”
But bottled water is nothing compared to Big Data.
Big Data is thirsty for your fresh water. It used to be Google, Microsoft, Amazon, Oracle, but now with the AI industry, water is being diverted from rivers, lakes, and aquifers like never before to do nothing except cool down machines that are help answer exam questions for bored high school students.
Just look at the comparison:
Bottled water: 300 billion liters (80 billion gallons) annually
Data centers: 660 billion liters (174 billion gallons) annually
In other words, Big Data is wasting twice as much fresh water as the entire bottled water industry, and it’s just to keep their damn servers cooled down. Evaporation cooling towers, direct liquid cooling, and humidification. There are a lot of reasons why Trump and the technocrats want AI to supposedly run the world, but I suspect the inefficiency of these data centers is actually a manufactured problem designed to speed up another Great Depression style dustbowl across America.
Indiana's newest cash crop isn't soybeans or corn; it's AI data centers — lots and lots of AI data centers.
The New York Times reports that Amazon is building a vast complex of AI infrastructure facilities on top of 1,200 acres of former cropland, all meant for startup Anthropic's project to build an AI model that is as powerful, complex — and, just possibly, as intelligent — as the human brain.
To that end, Amazon has constructed seven data centers on site, with around 30 slated to be built in total, according to the newspaper. It's such an outrageously ambitious project, with untold billions in investment, that Amazon has tapped four separate construction firms to get the complex finished as soon as possible.
[— via Futurism]
Time will tell how Indiana’s water levels fare once these 30 Amazon data centers are riddled across their state, but I would wager they’re going to be experiencing droughts like never before. This will be blamed on climate change, and the Green World Order will have to rise up and demand control of society in response.
Bottled water removes water completely from its ecosystem, while data centers use it temporarily and then dump the polluted water back into the ecosystem, or allow it to evaporate. But the key issue, it seems to me as a layman, is that there are critical points of water shortage every year, when droughts hit, and if hundreds of billions of gallons of water are being occupied in these data centers simultaneously, that’s simply water that can’t be used for more important things like farming and drinking.
Let me know what you think of this analysis. I’m no expert on water management or ecology, but this is one of those rare instances where I think ecologists and environmentalists are correct in raising an alarm. The big difference is that they blame capitalism and want to give authority to the Green World Order, whereas I want the government to stop stealing our tax money to give to corporations to create an artificial collapse scenario.
While you’re here…
I encourage everyone to read this excellent post by the man behind the Ice Age Farmer account, who got banned from YouTube and targeted for censorship following his reporting on the subject:
IceAgeFarmer was one of the most interesting blogs online for years, proposing that we are not going through a global warming crisis, but a global cooling crisis caused by the Sun generating relatively less heat for us.
Interestingly, the author of this publication, named Christian, is now dedicated to pushing for legislation to guarantee access to AI computing for individuals. He believes that centralization of AI is the next big problem, and that we should all have the right to create our own models and use AI for ourselves.
Now, I personally think that AI as a technology is perfectly fine and interesting, with no moral or spiritual problems involved, but it’s also very inefficient and flawed. The amount of computer resources needed to power a machine learning system is astronomical compared to regular computer processes. It takes a small server just to run DeepSeek half decently, which was already a breakthrough in AI model efficiency.
As a reminder, these posts are thought experiments about the end times and how various groups might work together to shape them, knowingly or unknowingly, and how we can think differently to prepare for it.
One thing that often gets overlooked is that when land and water stop being seen as something we’re accountable to, they just turn into commodities to be extracted. You don’t actually need a master plan to hollow out a place — just enough political apathy, profit incentives, and the habit of calling it progress.
Intriguing and compelling point about water.
But I disagree with the view that AI is simply a tool that has "no moral or spiritual problems involved."
There's an element of occultism in the field, and I'm starting to suspect that artificial intelligence may be rooted in Kabbalistic mysticism and serves as a medium that increases the scope and potency of demonic efforts to erode people's sense of reality and thereby detach individuals from their humanity.
For example, here's an interesting experiment:
https://thomassheridan.substack.com/p/so-i-asked-chatgpt-if-it-is-a-demon