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.
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.
Ref Climate Lockdowns - they are still planned but progressively and slowly - the Fabian way
Look at what us happening in the UK. SMART meter energy rationing to assist destructionnif rekiable power like Coal and Natural Gas. Elimination of ICE vehicles through taxation and fining of manufacturers, ULEZ zones, 15 minute cities, potential geo fencing of vehicles and people.
Check Absolute Zero report by "thinktank" UK Fires
"Chile's lithium extraction, particularly in the Salar de Atacama, requires significant amounts of water, at approximately 500,000 gallons per ton of lithium.
In Chile’s Salar de Atacama, lithium extraction has consumed 65 percent of the region’s water supply, creating extreme water shortages and impacting local farmers' abilities to grow crops and maintain livestock"
Terry thanks again for the great article: you’ve shared info with me I was ignorant of (I was awaiting the climate lockdowns having not gotten the intel). Allow me to share something with you (not that it may perhaps make a difference but at least people will understand the truth).
The whole water scarcity thing is a scam. There is an abundance of water below the ground: Primary Water and although atmospheric water may be scarce and exacerbated by govcorp (all governments are corporations) selling it to overseas interests and deliberately destroying waterways and dependent wildlife there is no water shortage. This is why they killed Gadafi: he wanted to reinvigorate African farming by the use of Primary Water. Primary Water was discovered during mining operations early last century and when the information was brought to the Californian government they were found to be strangely disinterested. Here is the website: please read and share this widely (https://primarywaterinstitute.org/). They say there are literally oceans worth of water beneath the ground.
I never buy bottled water but tap water is truly rotten stuff – ours in Australia also containing sewage and extra-high doses of fluoride (calficies the pineal gland and makes populations docile as well as lowering IQ) by those who know there is no water shortage but hide the fact of true water abundance from us – but just a filtration jug for the fridge is all you need.
I've heard of primary water before, I think they used to be called "springs" right?
I live in an area where the aquifer is low and the water gets drained or pumped before it can soak into the ground to replenish it, and there are a lot of farmers around who are concerned. Regardless of the theory of unlimited water from many miles below the surface, the fact is that conventional systems still rely on waterways and aquifers.
Also, geothermal heating is common, and it proves that you can drill down to super hot mantle rock without hitting this supposed water source. And if you had to drill deeper than that, the water would certainly be extremely hot, not something you'd cool with.
I think that springs (aka mineral water) are examples PW that are closer to the surface. My understanding is that PW is water that is formed by volcanic origin forming beneath the earth’s crust which arrives at the surface through fissures in rock strata due to tectonic forces and that springs might be closer to the surface.
PW is of volcanic origin (hot springs and geysers are examples of PW springing from cracks and fissures and under intense pressure). Some of it is superheated and emanates from ocean floors to mix with sea water and some forms hot springs but the webpage info also leads one to believe this is not always the case. Global Resource Alliance working with Pal Pauer drilled 80 boreholes of varying depths in Tanzania to install handpumps enabling villagers to have easy access to clean, microbe-free water rather than having to search for miles for water unfit to drink – this leads me to believe it was not necessarily of high temperature so not in all cases.
Stephan Reiss was able to tap into formations of hard desert rock of the right composition and produce as much as 8000 litres per minute. According to Pauer ‘it’s hard to get the point across to many people in the U.S. that the earth makes water. We can access it and solve our problems. We don’t need massive storage facilities or aqueducts. Clean, virtually infinite sources of water might be right under our feet’. This infers that the idea of water scarcity might be untrue.
I can't give you the detailed information this website can. For a better information I’d recommend reading some of that website I forwarded – even a cursory 10 minute glance will yield a lot more information than I can provide and might well provide useful for your farming community.
I mean, theoretically, you could create a man made lake or dam next to a data center that uses water cooling to the rack with heat blocks that transfer to a cage attached to water cooling system. I would imagine if the volume of water exceeds the thermal output of the data center CPUs / GPUs (140°F to 158°F, a decent amount I imagine is lost conducting the heat from the chip to the heat sink) then what you're really left with just just a heap of warm water, lightly filtered in a closed loop system, Moreover, it will probably take about 3-5 minutes for water to reach boiling point, but if you're constantly circulating that water, and using it as radiant insulation in the data center, between the volume of water, the distance it has to travel through the system in general, the distance it travels while not exposed to a heat block / heated element, the water would probably stay relatively cool and you'd be looking more at a high pressure filtration system that would like jet evaporation back into the bottom of the dam/lake and probably loose very little if any water. idk, I'm not a lawyer
I've thought about different solutions too, including just building all the data centers in the arctic and not insulate the walls. With AI especially, it seems to me that actual transfer of information is minimal (ie. sending the chatbot a few words to prompt it, and sending back text to the user) while the processing is the hard job. Why do the processing in a place that's hot and requires a ton of cooling and water?
Proximity to resources i suppose. I also expect upkeep/operation would be brutal. You'd probably be signing up for months long stints. I don't imagine there's a lot of electrical and fiber optic infrastructure in Antarctica. Solar panels would be a pain to maintain. I guess you could use Starlink for uplinks. But if each dish only does 150m that's a lot of interfaces to bond. You're right that the transmission isn't really a constraint, it's probably the latency.
As the owner of 2 small datacenters, when they are done properly, they don't consume any water. At the point that a datacenter needs water for cooling towers, etc. the damned thing is too big, too centralized, and is not sustainable on solar either.
I hear the usual suspects are eyeing up former (fossil fuel) power stations to install their mini nuclear power plants to power their data centres. Meanwhile, everyone else is being rationed (electricity blackouts) whilst simultaneously being manoeuvred into plugging into SMART this, that and everything.
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
Ref Climate Lockdowns - they are still planned but progressively and slowly - the Fabian way
Look at what us happening in the UK. SMART meter energy rationing to assist destructionnif rekiable power like Coal and Natural Gas. Elimination of ICE vehicles through taxation and fining of manufacturers, ULEZ zones, 15 minute cities, potential geo fencing of vehicles and people.
Check Absolute Zero report by "thinktank" UK Fires
https://ukfires.org/impact/publications/reports/absolute-zero/
No air travel, no meat, less clothing....
Interesting. Have a look at tge evapotation if under desert water supplies in Chile for our lithium battery addiction:
https://www.nrdc.org/stories/lithium-mining-leaving-chiles-indigenous-communities-high-and-dry-literally
https://www.tni.org/en/article/water-predators-the-industry-behind-green-energy
"Chile's lithium extraction, particularly in the Salar de Atacama, requires significant amounts of water, at approximately 500,000 gallons per ton of lithium.
In Chile’s Salar de Atacama, lithium extraction has consumed 65 percent of the region’s water supply, creating extreme water shortages and impacting local farmers' abilities to grow crops and maintain livestock"
Terry thanks again for the great article: you’ve shared info with me I was ignorant of (I was awaiting the climate lockdowns having not gotten the intel). Allow me to share something with you (not that it may perhaps make a difference but at least people will understand the truth).
The whole water scarcity thing is a scam. There is an abundance of water below the ground: Primary Water and although atmospheric water may be scarce and exacerbated by govcorp (all governments are corporations) selling it to overseas interests and deliberately destroying waterways and dependent wildlife there is no water shortage. This is why they killed Gadafi: he wanted to reinvigorate African farming by the use of Primary Water. Primary Water was discovered during mining operations early last century and when the information was brought to the Californian government they were found to be strangely disinterested. Here is the website: please read and share this widely (https://primarywaterinstitute.org/). They say there are literally oceans worth of water beneath the ground.
I never buy bottled water but tap water is truly rotten stuff – ours in Australia also containing sewage and extra-high doses of fluoride (calficies the pineal gland and makes populations docile as well as lowering IQ) by those who know there is no water shortage but hide the fact of true water abundance from us – but just a filtration jug for the fridge is all you need.
Thanks so much and God bless
I've heard of primary water before, I think they used to be called "springs" right?
I live in an area where the aquifer is low and the water gets drained or pumped before it can soak into the ground to replenish it, and there are a lot of farmers around who are concerned. Regardless of the theory of unlimited water from many miles below the surface, the fact is that conventional systems still rely on waterways and aquifers.
Also, geothermal heating is common, and it proves that you can drill down to super hot mantle rock without hitting this supposed water source. And if you had to drill deeper than that, the water would certainly be extremely hot, not something you'd cool with.
I think that springs (aka mineral water) are examples PW that are closer to the surface. My understanding is that PW is water that is formed by volcanic origin forming beneath the earth’s crust which arrives at the surface through fissures in rock strata due to tectonic forces and that springs might be closer to the surface.
PW is of volcanic origin (hot springs and geysers are examples of PW springing from cracks and fissures and under intense pressure). Some of it is superheated and emanates from ocean floors to mix with sea water and some forms hot springs but the webpage info also leads one to believe this is not always the case. Global Resource Alliance working with Pal Pauer drilled 80 boreholes of varying depths in Tanzania to install handpumps enabling villagers to have easy access to clean, microbe-free water rather than having to search for miles for water unfit to drink – this leads me to believe it was not necessarily of high temperature so not in all cases.
Stephan Reiss was able to tap into formations of hard desert rock of the right composition and produce as much as 8000 litres per minute. According to Pauer ‘it’s hard to get the point across to many people in the U.S. that the earth makes water. We can access it and solve our problems. We don’t need massive storage facilities or aqueducts. Clean, virtually infinite sources of water might be right under our feet’. This infers that the idea of water scarcity might be untrue.
I can't give you the detailed information this website can. For a better information I’d recommend reading some of that website I forwarded – even a cursory 10 minute glance will yield a lot more information than I can provide and might well provide useful for your farming community.
I mean, theoretically, you could create a man made lake or dam next to a data center that uses water cooling to the rack with heat blocks that transfer to a cage attached to water cooling system. I would imagine if the volume of water exceeds the thermal output of the data center CPUs / GPUs (140°F to 158°F, a decent amount I imagine is lost conducting the heat from the chip to the heat sink) then what you're really left with just just a heap of warm water, lightly filtered in a closed loop system, Moreover, it will probably take about 3-5 minutes for water to reach boiling point, but if you're constantly circulating that water, and using it as radiant insulation in the data center, between the volume of water, the distance it has to travel through the system in general, the distance it travels while not exposed to a heat block / heated element, the water would probably stay relatively cool and you'd be looking more at a high pressure filtration system that would like jet evaporation back into the bottom of the dam/lake and probably loose very little if any water. idk, I'm not a lawyer
I've thought about different solutions too, including just building all the data centers in the arctic and not insulate the walls. With AI especially, it seems to me that actual transfer of information is minimal (ie. sending the chatbot a few words to prompt it, and sending back text to the user) while the processing is the hard job. Why do the processing in a place that's hot and requires a ton of cooling and water?
Proximity to resources i suppose. I also expect upkeep/operation would be brutal. You'd probably be signing up for months long stints. I don't imagine there's a lot of electrical and fiber optic infrastructure in Antarctica. Solar panels would be a pain to maintain. I guess you could use Starlink for uplinks. But if each dish only does 150m that's a lot of interfaces to bond. You're right that the transmission isn't really a constraint, it's probably the latency.
As the owner of 2 small datacenters, when they are done properly, they don't consume any water. At the point that a datacenter needs water for cooling towers, etc. the damned thing is too big, too centralized, and is not sustainable on solar either.
For a rollicking good read, in the science fiction genre, I thoroughly recommend
‘ROBOPOCALYPSE’ by Daniel H Wilson: Published in 2011,
I’ve enjoyed reading it two or three times. Several of the scenarios in the comments, are in the story.
I hear the usual suspects are eyeing up former (fossil fuel) power stations to install their mini nuclear power plants to power their data centres. Meanwhile, everyone else is being rationed (electricity blackouts) whilst simultaneously being manoeuvred into plugging into SMART this, that and everything.