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AI Data Centers: The Real Reason They're Going Up Everywhere Who's paying for them. Why it's happening this fast. What the buildout is for. Why you should care.
I live in Montana but I am from Pennsylvania so I follow a Facebook page called I live In Pa. I kept seeing AI data centers on this channel split-screened against the farmland and covered bridges they're replacing. Larry Fink's picture and shareholder letter, where he said the quiet part out loud about how they get paid for. So I sat down and pulled the threads.
This is what came out of it. It's longer than I usually publish. Every cut lost something the rest needed, so here it is at full length. By the time everyone agrees on what this buildout is for, the concrete will already be poured. Right now is the window — the language is still being decided, the legal challenges are still possible, and the public memory of similar buildouts is still warm.
What an AI Data Center Actually Is
"AI data center" sounds like a server room — abstract, technical, somebody else's business. The vagueness is doing work. You can't organize against something you can't picture.
So here's what one is. A massive industrial facility, typically half a million to several million square feet. Tens of thousands of specialized processors in dense racks, each rack drawing more power than an average home. A full center can draw 100 to over 1,000 megawatts — the largest rival the power use of a mid-sized city. Cooling the heat takes water, sometimes millions of gallons a day, pulled from local aquifers, rivers, or municipal supply. Featureless buildings. No windows. Razor wire. A facility that uses a city's worth of electricity might employ thirty to a hundred people. It exists to host computation, not workers.