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Almonds feed a people. AI feeds a machine.
theblaze4d ago

Almonds feed a people. AI feeds a machine.

The artificial intelligence boom has become one of the biggest engines of the American economy. It has also triggered a growing backlash against the data centers that make the boom possible. Tech moguls have rushed to build giant warehouses packed with the computing power needed to run AI systems, but they have done almost nothing to explain to ordinary Americans why those facilities deserve so much land, water, electricity, and political favoritism. That failure should have created an obvious opening for libertarians. Governments shower data-center projects with subsidies, wield eminent domain to seize land, and help politically connected corporations reshape local communities in the name of technological progress. A coherent libertarian response would attack the merger of state power and corporate power. The first great use of AI will not be liberation. It will be surveillance and control. Instead, many libertarians have chosen to cheer the expansion without asking what the technology will be used for or whom it will serve. Their quasi-religious loyalty to capital has pushed them into another foolish position and exposed the danger of turning an economic theory into a full worldview. The tech elite insist that AI will revolutionize the world, but they have done almost nothing to tell average people how their own lives will improve. Silicon Valley entrepreneurs spin wild stories about superhuman intelligence and the automation of tens of millions of jobs. That does not sound like a sales pitch. It sounds like the setup for a science-fiction dystopia. The one concrete justification they offer is strategic: AI will supposedly define the future of warfare, and America must stay ahead of China. That argument would carry more weight if the same people pushing AI were not also so committed to building the kind of technology most likely to be used against Americans. They are not preparing some noble shield for the republic. They are building tools that can make the United States look a lot more like the techno-authoritarian China they claim to fear. Data centers consume staggering amounts of electricity, sometimes drawing as much power as a moderate-sized city. They also use enormous volumes of water, create nonstop noise, and disfigure the landscape. Developers have found ways to soften some of those costs by building new power infrastructure and improving cooling efficiency, but none of the problems have been solved. In the meantime, local communities absorb the burden. The economic case is weak as well. Data centers create construction jobs while they are being built, but once construction ends, they employ surprisingly few people. Governments usually justify subsidies by promising long-term economic activity and job growth. In the case of data centers, corporations collect the incentives while communities get very little in return. A sane political movement would notice that. Many libertarians have not. Instead of challenging subsidies and land seizures, they have fought to champion the projects. Nick Gillespie of Reason recently posted a chart showing that almond farms use far more water than AI data centers. Almonds are notoriously inefficient in water use, and agriculture probably does consume more water overall. But the comparison gives away the problem. People eat food. AI, at least so far, mostly offers job displacement and surveillance. RELATED: Your enemies aren’t mentally ill. They apparently just want to kill you. Blaze Media Illustration Libertarianism grew, in part, out of the Austrian school of economics, which is useful for understanding markets. It was never meant to serve as a complete theory of human life. Like Marxists, however, many libertarians have turned an economic framework into a totalizing ideology. Free markets, contract law, and voluntary exchange become an all-encompassing lens through which everything must be judged. Once that happens, it becomes difficult to see anything that does not show up in GDP. The real question is not how much of a resource gets spent, but for what purpose. Most people would not give up a hand to save a cockroach. Most would give up their lives to save a child. On paper, preserving the cockroach may look like the more efficient transaction. Only a lunatic would fail to understand why no sane person would ever choose it over the child. Economics helps explain financial exchange, but in its hunger for abstraction, it often strips away the human element that drives actual decisions. Treat almonds and AI as interchangeable “economic activity,” and you erase the context that gives moral meaning to both. That is the error every ideology makes. Grand unified theories comfort the rational mind because they promise predictive clarity. Then they collide with actual human beings living in actual places. Kevin O’Leary recently went on Tucker Carlson’s podcast to praise the record-setting data center he wants to build in Utah . Carlson pressed him repeatedly to name a job AI would create for ordinary Americans. O’Leary could not identify a single one. He fell back on vague assurances that new technologies always create jobs somewhere in the future. The one benefit he seemed sure about was that AI might help America defend Taiwan in a future war with China. That is a revealing answer to citizens asking how this technology will help their own country. RELATED: The liberal guide to committing national suicide Blaze Media Illustration Many libertarians now seem to support data centers out of sheer loyalty to capital itself. Economic activity becomes an end in itself. Progress, no matter the cost, is presumed to produce more liberty. That is delusional. The first great use of AI will not be liberation. It will be surveillance and control. The same corporate and political class that backed vaccine mandates, digital surveillance, censorship, and biometric passes during COVID is now demanding trust on AI. Nothing in its conduct suggests a change of heart. Our tech oligarchs lined up with Democrats, outsourced American jobs, embraced censorship, and showed enormous appetite for monitoring the population. They are not trustworthy allies. The backlash against data centers may lack intellectual polish, but the instinct is sound. The elites driving AI are not on our side, and Americans have no reason to sacrifice their communities, resources, and liberty on behalf of people who plainly intend to use this technology against them.

#TECH
Trump set to sign AI cybersecurity directive as soon as Thursday
thestar_my4d ago

Trump set to sign AI cybersecurity directive as soon as Thursday

President Donald Trump is poised to issue an executive order as soon as Thursday aimed at bolstering artificial intelligence cybersecurity and has asked tech industry leaders to join for the event, according to people familiar with the matter.

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Digest: Google Debuts New AI Model; Singapore Signs New AI Deals
exchangewire4d ago

Digest: Google Debuts New AI Model; Singapore Signs New AI Deals

In today’s Digest, we discuss OpenAI committing USD$234m as Singapore signs new AI deals, Google debuting a new AI model amid pressure from coding rivals, and UK advertising returning to Cannes Lions. The post Digest: Google Debuts New AI Model; Singapore Signs New AI Deals appeared first on ExchangeWire.com .

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East-Central Indiana Moves Toward “Guarded Optimism” as Regional Business Confidence Rises 4%
iu_edu4d ago

East-Central Indiana Moves Toward “Guarded Optimism” as Regional Business Confidence Rises 4%

RICHMOND, Ind. – The IU East Business and Economic Research Center (BERC) has released the results of the 2025 East-Central Indiana Business Survey, revealing a regional economy that has been successfully navigating post-pandemic volatility while pivoting toward a growth-oriented 2026. IU East Regional Business Confidence Index (IUERBCI) rose to 90.40 in 2025, marking a 4.0% increase over the previous year. This positive shift suggests that while the region has remained below the 100-point pre-pandemic base-year threshold, sentiment has entered a phase of "guarded optimism." The index's growth was primarily fueled by an 8.5% surge in the Present Situation Index, reflecting significant year-over-year gains in realized production and profitability. While the index indicates that sentiment is still maturing, the 2025 data reflects a region that has moved past volatility. The most frequent response for 2026 profitability expectations shifted from 'about the same' to 'slightly higher,' suggesting that a significant plurality of regional firms expect margins to expand. Additional 2025 highlights include: Workforce Stability Despite a fluctuating market, 90% of businesses either maintained or expanded their workforce. Investment Persistence 96% of surveyed firms intend to either maintain or expand capital investments through 2026. Small Business Resilience 92% of the 119 respondents were small businesses with fewer than 50 employees, representing the "economic bedrock" of the seven-county region. The "Growth-Cost" Paradox Despite the rise in confidence, the report identifies a "dual-pressure" environment. Expansion is being funded through increased production, but that capital is often immediately absorbed by rising overhead. 84% of companies anticipate further increases in the cost of doing business in 2026, primarily driven by payroll (54%) and rising wage rates (56%); insurance (47%); and supply prices (61%) and raw material costs. While the intensity of these pressures appears to be easing compared to 2025, the report highlights an "overhead squeeze" in sectors like retail trade and accommodation and food services, where even small increases in overhead can impact annual profit growth. Systemic Barriers to Expansion The survey results go beyond simple metrics to address structural challenges. Respondents consistently identified two primary inhibitors to expansion: labor scarcity and a lack of middle-class housing. To sustain current momentum, surveyed businesses recommend a strategic focus on infrastructure modernization, including sewer and utility expansion; administrative reform, and removing "red tape" for grants. Community Support Initiatives to attract both young families and "intellectual firepower" to the regional workforce. About the Survey The 2025 East-Central Indiana Business Survey was conducted online in September-October 2025, gathering valid responses from 119 business owners and managers across a diverse cross-section of industry sectors, led by Manufacturing and Accommodation/Food Services. The full report, including county-level breakdowns, can be accessed through the IU East Business and Economic Research Center website under the Regional Business Research section. About the IU East Business and Economic Research Center (BERC) The IU East BERC serves as a vital economic data hub for East-Central Indiana, providing local businesses and community leaders with objective analysis for informed decision-making. The center specializes in monitoring regional trends, conducting surveys, and producing the annual Business Confidence Index. By bridging academic research with practical application, the BERC fosters regional growth through its six core pillars: Vision through data, Impact through outreach, Discipline in research, Growth in partnerships, Legacy via alumni engagement, and Contribution to community promotion.

#ECONOMY
China’s corporate earnings lag behind stock market gains, survey finds
scmp4d ago

China’s corporate earnings lag behind stock market gains, survey finds

Chinese listed companies have delivered strong stock returns over the past year even as net profits grew by only about 1 per cent, suggesting the gains were driven more by higher valuations than corporate earnings, according to a quarterly investor survey released by the Cheung Kong Graduate School of Business (CKGSB). Net profit growth turned positive at about 1 per cent on a trailing 12-month basis to the first quarter of 2026, while price-to-earnings ratios rose 31.2 per cent, the survey...

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Gold, Silver Prices Today, May 21: MCX Gold, Silver Slip; Check 24K, 22K Rates In Delhi, Mumbai, Chennai And More Cities
newsx4d ago

Gold, Silver Prices Today, May 21: MCX Gold, Silver Slip; Check 24K, 22K Rates In Delhi, Mumbai, Chennai And More Cities

The gold and silver rates declined in India on Thursday on the back of lower global bullion rates and shifted interest rate expectations sentiments. Domestic markets also adjusted to recent import duty revisions and tight silver import regulations. Global policy directions, crude oil price movements, and currency trends remain closely watched factors for gold and silver.

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Abia State partners to boost electricity supply & infrastruc
ghanamma4d ago

Abia State partners to boost electricity supply & infrastruc

Abia State Governor, Alex Otti, reaffirmed his administration’s commitment to improving electricity supply in the state through partnerships and reforms in the power sector. Otti stated this while receiving the Managing Director and Chief Executive Officer of the Niger Delta Power Holding Company, Jennifer Adighije, during a meeting at the Government House in Umuahia on [...] The post Abia State partners to boost electricity supply & infrastruc appeared first on Ghanamma.com .

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