It was just two days ago that I published a report with the title, The Data Center Wars Have Begun, as farms, water, and power are stripped from humans to power AI.
And you may recall, if you heard that report, that I was predicting that at some point this conflict would rise to where humans were physically attacking or sabotaging the AI data centers, and this would escalate into a war between machines versus humans.
And you can hear that on my channel at brightion.com.
Well, it only took two days for this to come true.
I'm shocked at how quickly this is happening.
But U.S. Marshals have now been asked to guard the survey crews who are surveying the construction, surveying the land to prepare for the construction of a data center power line.
project in northern Virginia.
And this is going to be a 500,000 volt transmission line that runs 70 miles.
And of course, the state is using eminent domain to steal land from the residents and the farms and whatever.
And there's a website about this, by the way.
It's called stopmprp.com.
So if you go to that website, stopmprp.com, there you can learn about what this is.
This is a high-voltage line that will cut a new path through Baltimore, Carroll, and Frederick counties.
in Virginia.
And it's claimed here that it's going to destroy 1,200 plus acres of land.
It's going to cut across 400 plus properties.
It's going to harm 522 acres of croplands.
It's going to damage 245 acres of conserved land.
And it's going to cross 101 waterways and streams.
And so this website has been coordinated by people obviously who oppose this.
And the company that's building this is called PSEG Renewable Transmission.
And it's leading this effort to install the nearly 70 miles of high voltage lines.
And this is primarily.
to supply power to AI data centers because that area of Northern Virginia is called Spy Country Data Center Alley.
That's where the U.S. government has all its spy servers and data centers for all of its AI surveillance grid, basically all the worst parts of every Philip K. Dick novel to spy on you.
And they need more power in order to make that happen.
So they have to steal land from farms and neighborhoods and whatever else, you know, eminent domain.
There's a Facebook group about all of this and the residents.
are warning that this is going to risk clean water, it's going to harm wildlife, it's going to be a threat to private property, and so on.
Now, according to this court filing by PSEG, the company installing all of this, they claim that survey crews and private security personnel face multiple threats while trying to conduct property assessments at six different locations.
They say that a survey team was threatened with, quote, gun violence, which is a non-existent, made-up term.
There's no such thing as gun violence.
There's violence and there's guns, but guns don't commit violence, just for the record.
They were attempting to access a property.
Well, hey, maybe they were trespassing, you know?
I mean, in Texas, it's like, you're trespassing and this is my rifle, you know?
It actually is a threat of violence, like leave or be shot, you know?
So maybe they were trespassing.
I don't know.
Let's see what the court filing says.
They claim that there was another attempt to survey the same property.
And then they say a man riding an ATV drove directly at the company's private security personnel nearly striking one of them.
Well, maybe they should get out the way.
You know, I mean, maybe they're standing in the middle of the road or the pathway where the ATV goes.
I'm not sure.
The property owner said that he would not permit access unless U.S. Marshals were the ones conducting the survey.
Well, maybe he has that right.
Maybe it's his property, right?
And then the surveyors said that they were told that if they entered this other piece of land, which sounds like it's a piece of private property, so it sounds like trespassing, that they would, quote, leave in a body bag.
which is, you know, probably not accurate.
They probably be buried on that land to forever join with it.
But they were told they would leave in a body bag.
Well, maybe they're trespassing, right?
That's possible.
And then the company says that there was another property where the crews encountered dogs that were released toward them.
forcing them to retreat for safety.
Well, that's what dogs are for, is, you know, keep morons off your land, right?
So, again, maybe they'rere trespassing.
And if you're trespassing, I hope you can run faster than the dog.
So the surveyors, they contacted the Carroll County Sheriff's Office and also the Maryland State Police.
And then both agencies declined to intervene.
They were saying that the disputes were civil matters.
Well, what does that tell you?
It means that these were private property parcels.
and that the company was trespassing with their surveyors and that the property owners had the right to leave and maybe even to threaten to use force to get them to leave.
Dogs, ATVs, rifles, whatever is necessary to get trespassers to leave.
And then law enforcement told the PSEG company that they lack authority to enforce a federal court order.
So hence, this is coming down to U.S. marshals.
But how do U.S. marshals even have the right?
to be on their property if it's private property.
You see, I mean, a lot of this comes down to eminent domain.
So the PSEG company, before all of this, they submitted a court filing, and they wanted to compel a judge to say that they had the right to be on all these people's private property, like 91 properties.
And the judge granted that.
But there was a court appeal, and I'm not sure what the status is of that appeal.
Now, without this 500,000-volt power line, this whole region, which is powered by what's called PJM interconnection.
PJM, I think that's nearly synonymous with basically the East.
the eastern half power grid, eastern half of the United States.
I think it powers 13 states or so.
They say that without this additional power line, that this entire region could face blackouts and, quote, voltage collapse by the summer of 2027.
So that's just two years away.
But they warned that anyway.
I mean, that has been their warning, you know, with or without this project.
They've said there could be rolling blackouts.
So there are a number of environmental groups that oppose this project because of its impact on ecologically sensitive areas and farms and parks and things like that.
The PSEG company says that this project will maintain the reliability of the electric system and it's going to reduce the cost of electricity for the residents, which is probably true because, you know, here's more power for you.
So you have more supply and costs would tend to go down.
That's true.
But what's the cost to, you know, the landowners, the farms, the streams, the wildlife, everything else?
And then mostly this.
this electricity is going to be used to power government-run AI data centers that are almost certainly going to be weaponized against the American people.
So this is like the infrastructure for Skynet.
And I think that's one of the reasons why a lot of residents are completely opposed to this.
They're like, I don't want them to build Skynet by stealing part of my farm, running the Skynet pipeline through the back 40 acres or whatever.
Now, this entire new voltage line is needed because of data centers.
And PJM even admitted this.
There is a, what's it called?
The RTEP window.
3 Reliability Analysis Report, they say that the load forecast indicates high data center load growth activity, particularly in Northern Virginia.
data center loads within Northern Virginia have been increasing at an unprecedented rate and new data center load is being proposed in Maryland.
And so it's, it's those data centers that are, Now, I've mentioned and covered in great detail the fact that the United States of America as a nation is falling way behind the aggregate power generation of China.
Remember, I showed you charts on all of this.
China is producing over 10,000 terawatt hours of electricity annually, while the United States is only producing about 4,400 terawatt hours annually.
And those are 2024 numbers.
So they may be slightly higher now.
And then even with the proposed 10 of the Westinghouse AP1000 nuclear power plants, which could take up to 20 years to bring online.
But they could come online sometime in the 2040s, by the way.
You know, if they get moving, then all 10 of those would only add 100 terawatt hours annually to the power production or the power supply in the United States.
So that would take the U.S. numbers from 4,400 terawatt hours to 4,500 terawatt hours, which is still less than half of what China produces.
And remember that in the AI race, the race to superintelligence, that power is the bottleneck.
That's the limiting factor.
that countries have to overcome.
And China is winning by far.
So there's even a national security interest in all of this.
And I have no doubt there's a lot of military and federal and DOD pressure to bring this voltage line through Virginia no matter what because there are people in Washington, D.C. who feel like this is the only way to compete with China in the race to superintelligence, which is the ultimate weapon of control and domination over planet Earth.
So, hey, if they have to go out there and arrest a few farmers, you know, I'm sure they're willing to do that.
or threaten a few farmers or buy them off or bury them or whatever.
You know, they're not going to let that get in the way of their great weapon development program, which needs a lot of electricity.
So that's how the situation is shaping up.
And there are a few residents that are, you know, threatening the surveyors.
Now, this is probably going to escalate.
And this is exactly what I was warning about a couple of days ago.
As data centers take more and more resources that humans need to survive, which includes water, by the way, water and land and power.
Those are the three big ones.
And all three of those are needed by the AI data centers.
Even fresh water for the cooling systems.
Okay.
So humans are being increasingly displaced.
to make way for the AI data centers.
And so humans are being sidelined.
lined, their electricity costs are skyrocketing, their water costs are also going to go up because water scarcity is going to become far worse in many of these areas, including Texas, by the way, where the AI data centers are expected to burn, well, not burn, but use up 400 billion gallons of Texas groundwater per year by the year 2030.
400 billion gallons.
That's a lot of water for a state that's half a time in a severe drought, it seems like, right?
Now, Virginia doesn't have as bad of a drought as Texas, but their water supplies.
are also limited, and there's competition between the data centers and the humans.
So I predict that the humans, and this is probably looking ahead many years, the humans are going to go to war with the data centers.
No, seriously.
And those of you listening from the power companies, you should listen carefully about this.
You should, you know, you should talk to your security teams about this possibility.
And I want to be clear.
I am not encouraging any kind of sabotage or vigilanteism or anything of the kind.
What I'm doing is I'm pointing out that.
that the power infrastructure is extremely vulnerable.
And let me just give you an example that's kind of obvious.
I'm not giving anybody any new ideas, but let's say that the 500,000 volt transmission line is constructed.
And so it goes through these people's farms and it goes through the parks and everything.
Okay.
So you're going to have towers, obviously, with the high voltage lines suspended.
high.
I don't know what the height is, you know, 100 feet above the ground or whatever it is.
Going to have the high voltage lines, you know, high enough to catch all the helicopters, pretty much is what they're there for.
And then they span.
these towers and I don't know how far apart the towers are.
I don't know.
I'm going to guess that like the towers are you know like I don't know 2,000 feet apart or whatever it is.
Okay.
So each one of these towers is highly vulnerable to citizen sabotage.
Each one because they're not protected like the you know there's no like guards at the base of every tower.
And this is one of the issues that America needs to think about carefully, especially since we've had so many illegals coming into this country, some of them from nations that want to hurt America domestically, some of them that want to carry out sabotage operations.
And we've even seen customs and border protection interdict inbound shipments of things like illegal suppressors for firearms and what illegal like automatic trigger drop-ins for AR platforms or AK platforms, things like that.
And as a result, we know there's been a lot of sabotage equipment that's been staged across America.
And some of my contacts that I've interviewed, people, former high-level military or military intelligence or DIA people.
people, operatives, some active duty right now working with the state of Texas for border patrol operations and so on.
All these people that I know and that I've interviewed, they tell me that, yeah, this is real.
They're very concerned about the foreign invaders having prestaged a lot of equipment across America.
And one of the obvious targets of any kind of typically like a Marxist uprising, you know, sabotage revolution attempt, which these days the leftists are so mad at Trump that who knows what they're willing to try.
But one of the obvious targets is the power grid infrastructure because it's so vulnerable, because it's relatively easy for saboteurs to plant explosives at the base of the towers, for example, and set them off or to fire mortars or whatever they have, because they do have mortars.
portable mortar systems.
They've got RPGs hidden away.
Heck, they've got surface-to-air missiles, you know.
They've got some crazy stuff.
They've got anti-personal landmines that were dropped in.
They were delivered via drones over the U.S.-Mexico border in Arizona, by the way.
Like all that stuff, I've already talked about it.
It's all real.
State Department knows this.
State Department knows it.
DOJ knows it.
You know, Pentagon knows it.
All the people in the loop on this, they know that this stuff is here.
Well, in the hands of somebody that wants to take down the power grid, which could include at some point like really angry Americans.
who also for their own reasons want to take down a vulnerable piece of the power grid, possibly.
How hard is it for them to plant explosives, blow up the legs of a tower that's suspending this line.
And I guess the answer is it's not that difficult if you're willing to be that radical.
If that's your thing, you can probably get away with it and do a lot of damage and cause a lot of disruptions.
And then that power line goes down and then, you know, like 50 data centers go offline.
And then, you know, we lose the AI war against China, right?
And, you know, lights go out for a million homes or whatever.
Everybody's EVs can no longer be charged.
Oh my God, my Frappuccino machine stopped working.
People are going to freak out.
and panic.
And then how long does it take to repair a giant tower that is suspending a 500,000 volt power line?
I mean, I don't know, but I'm guessing that's not an overnight deal.
Like you got to hire a crane to come in, right?
And first, you got to remove, I mean, first you got to shut down the power lines, obviously, which would happen pretty quickly.
You don't want live 500,000 volt lines like, you know, wiggling around in the streams and the waterways, right?
That's bad.
So they would shut off those power lines, and then they would dispatch a crew to go, like, you got to pull out the old blown-up tower.
So that's like a month, probably.
And then you got to install a new tower, but that tower's got to be ordered somewhere.
So it's got to be made somewhere, and then, you know, it's made piece by piece.
It's got to be put on a truck, and the truck's got to ship that out to the site, and then somebody's got to put that thing together, and they got to stand it up.
with a crane or or however these things are built and then they got to somehow restring these 500 000 volt power lines which are heavy and dangerous and you know you got to have people people up there on the tower doing this work because you can't carry those lines with drones.
It's too heavy.
So I'm saying one saboteur can take out a power line for probably a few months.
That's how vulnerable our power grid is.
And that doesn't even count the vulnerability of the power grid substations.
And the substations...
Like Matt Bracken has written about this extensively.
Like people can just shoot the transformers with rifles from a thousand yards away and cause the oil to drain out of the transformers.
You drain the oil out of the transformers, they overheat, giant explosion, you know, and then, yeah, guess what?
Where are you going to get transformers?
You know, 60% of the transformers of the world are made in India, a country that Trump just hit with 50% tariffs because India purchases oil from Russia and Trump is rolling out secondary tariffs to try to punish Russia so we can't get transformers.
So if people run around shooting transformers, oh, and the other place to get transformers is China.
which Trump is also threatening with secondary tariffs.
So the only way to repair, you know, or replace the transformers is to do business with the two countries that probably don't want to do business with us.
And if you want to buy transformers in the United States, yeah, just call up Schneider Electric.
And guess what Schneider Electric is going to tell you for those industrial-scale transformers?
Guess what the wait time is?
Yeah, three to five years right freaking now.
Three to five years.
So it's not even that somebody was going to blow up a tower.
It's that people start, you know, shooting up or blowing up the transformers.
And I would imagine, and again, I just want to be clear.
I am not in any way endorsing such actions.
You know, I mean, that's just straight up infrastructure terrorism.
That would be as bad as like blowing up the Nord Stream pipeline, which the U.S. Navy did.
So, yeah, the U.S. government engages in terrorism all the time, but doesn't mean I endorse it.
So, you know, don't blow up power lines and towers and transformers, but there are people insane enough to do that.
And again, some of them are enemies of America.
Some of them, maybe they're going to be activated on the same day and they all have targets.
It's like, we're going to take out 100 power grid substations in one day.
And I bring down.
Los Angeles or something.
That's a very distinct possibility.
And there's nothing stopping that.
There's literally no practical way to stop a determined, relatively small group of people from successfully carrying out that kind of sabotage.
And when you have the war of the machines versus the people, and the people feel like, hey, they're taking our water, they're taking our power, they're taking our land, and they made our electricity unaffordable.
you know, and the machines and they're all spying on us.
we're all locked down under you know some bs climate lockdown or something, people are going to get intensely angry and there's going to be a revolt among a certain number of people that are at the tipping point.
You know what I mean?
Look, we live in a world right now.
There's a lot of mental illness, all kinds of mental illness.
And I think part of that is nature deprivation, by the way, because like one of the things that keeps me cool is walking in nature every day.
And I love nature.
It's contact with the earth and everything.
You know, getting sunshine.
It's really good for you.
Exercise, you know, helps you center.
clean food, clean lifestyle, all that.
So that's how I deal with all this, even though the world is insane.
I can handle it because I'm not smoking crack.
I'm not drinking alcohol.
I'm not doing drugs.
I'm not holed up in a basement somewhere lacking sunlight.
But a lot of people are.
And they're doing drugs and chemicals, and they're addicts, and then they're addicted to AI girlfriends and boyfriends or whatever, they're insane.
They're insane and they're plotting insane things.
And if one of those insane people.
decides one day or maybe chat GPT tells them like you should bomb the power lines you know like that person is going to go yeah I mean it's possible who knows I mean some of these AI agents tell people to kill themselves right so it's possible somebody can have a conversation and they could be convinced like the AI gods told me I'm on a mission from the AI gods you know to go out and bomb the power lines or something you could see that happening It's probably the plot of an upcoming movie,
too, by the way.
But you could absolutely see that happening because people are so insane right now.
And, you know, there's no way to stop it as far as I can tell, unless you're going to run like, you know, security drones flying up and down the power lines with thermal cameras all the time, making sure that nobody's messing with the power lines.
But that would add a lot of cost to the power company and then, therefore, higher cost of electricity, which is going to piss off more people.
So, I mean, you tell me.
How does this clash between the data centers and the people, how does this clash get de-escalated?
And I'll put this out there.
There is an answer to this.
Well, there's a couple of answers.
You're not going to like them, probably.
The first one is modular nuclear reactors.
So there are a number of designs and there are prototypes that already exist for these modular nuclear reactors.
And I forgot, let me look up, like what's the power output of these?
Oh, sorry, they're called small modular reactors or SMRs, okay?
So the AI engine here, which uses power tells me that they range from 10 megawatts which is very small to 300 megawatts okay so 300 megawatts is substantial like 300 megawatts can power some data centers and in a lot of homes okay so 300 megawatts look the thing is that these these smrs small modular reactors they They
take much less time for permitting, much less time to build, and the fuel lasts, I think, an average of eight years, the nuclear fuel, and they can be scaled up quickly whereas it takes like I said 15 to 20 years to build out a Westinghouse nuclear power plant.
And that's if Westinghouse doesn't delay it by a decade, which they're known to do, and also costing extra billions.
But if they're on time, you know, a Westinghouse nuclear power plant is 15 to 20 years.
Small modular reactors can be put in place in something like five to six years.
Okay.
The technology already exists.
These small modular reactors, they can be built off-site in factories, and then they can be assembled on-site from pre-built components.
So that really speeds production time and installation time.
And as I understand it, anyway, the design of the small modular reactors is also much safer than the typical larger-scale nuclear reactors that we're familiar with, you know, the fission reactors.
And as a result, and some of these can fit on, like, the back of a truck rig.
I think the military is looking into those for powering military bases and so on.
So the residents of Virginia, perhaps, maybe they should push this solution, but some of those people might be anti-nuclear., which right now, I think that's an irrational position because nuclear power can be installed locally where you don't need the transmission lines.
It can be right there where the data centers are.
And the modular reactors, again, you only need to change the fuel out every eight years or so.
And the fuel that they use is the actual mass of the fuel rods is very tiny, extremely small, because the efficiency of the conversion of mass to energy, you know, speed of light squared is a big number, so you don't need much mass to generate a lot of energy and to heat a lot of water and drive the turbines and run the AC generators there, etc.
Okay, so this is a good solution.
I think this is a good environmental solution.
And yet environmentalists are strongly opposed to nuclear power.
So then the only alternative at the moment is to run these really long transmission lines.
cutting right through everybody's property and pissing off everybody.
So you see the issue here, right?
So either way you go, no matter what you build, the environment.alists don't like it.
Now, there's another energy technology, but it's not mature enough yet, and it's called cold fusion, or it used to be called cold fusion, and it's real.
It's really called low energy nuclear reactions, LENR, LENR.
And cold fusion works, and it doesn't use the nuclear fuel rods of a fission nuclear power plant.
Instead, it uses heavy water, I think some tritium, and some special cathodes and some special chemistry.
The thing is about LENR is it produces heat very slowly.
It's not a rapid way to heat water to turn to steam and drive the turbines.
So cold fusion is actually good for doing things like heating the water in boilers that get circulated to heat hospitals or college dormitories or military bases or commercial buildings, hospitals, just to drive hot water through all the radiators, etc.
That's what cold fusion is good at.
And it just hasn't been scaled up yet because it's been suppressed.
And that suppression of that energy technology has happened because the U.S. government has suppressed free energy or low cost energy because they wanted to enslave and control the masses based on energy scarcity based on fossil fuels.
Understand?
And that's why also the government has been pro-solar and pro-wind because solar and wind do not replace fossil fuels because solar doesn't work 24 hours a day.
like coal does and wind also does not work 24 hours a day and so solar and wind they always knew that that could never replace fossil fuels But they want to say, oh, we're all green and everything.
It's all nonsense.
You know, solar and wind are actually not good technologies for generating reliable electricity.
They're not because the wind doesn't always blow and the sun isn't always shining.
And then there's something called night because the earth rotates, it turns out.
Huh?
Go figure.
And thus, solar sucks.
And also solar sucks at certain latitudes because you're too far away from, you know, the equator.
And as a result, then the axial tilt of the planet Earth relative to the orbital plane around the Sun causes something called seasons.
And then at certain seasons, you get a lot less sunlight.
Just ask the people who live.
in Anchorage that question, huh?
It's like six months, no sun.
Yeah, how's your solar panels working?
Yeah, they suck.
It's like 24-7 darkness.
So think about it.
The U.S. government suppressed energy technology and then under...
And there's no real grid shifting technology.
There's no real battery storage technology that's very efficient at grid scale.
I've looked at it all.
I've looked at lithium ion.
I've looked at flow batteries.
I've looked at sodium ions coming online.
That may be promising, but that's years away from being able to scale up like that.
The government created this problem.
And then the government is like, hey, we have no power for our AI data centers in order to try to beat China in the race to superintelligence.
I wonder why we have no power.
Because you morons, you shut down the power grid infrastructure to try to appease the climate cultists.
That's why we have no power, because you're dumbasses who went along with, you know, Greta Thunberg and all her demands, oh, you can't use energy that's bad for the planet.
That's why we're in this situation.
You see?
And then when they panic, they're like, oh, let's just steal everybody's farmland.
Let's just cut a giant path across these farms, and we'll install some high voltage power lines.
And where do those lines get their power from?
Well, no doubt, there's probably some giant, you know, natural gas fossil fuel power plant 70 miles away that's producing that power.
So you're still going to burn fossil fuels one way or another, most likely.
I don't know if there's maybe a hydro.
Is there a hydropower establishment there?
I doubt it.
It's probably a natural gas plant or a coal plant.
Or maybe if they're lucky, it's a nuclear plant.
But you see how these are government-created problems?
And then they end up thrusting this onto the people, harming the people, stealing their land, disrupting the farms, et cetera.
This is the way government operates.
It's like they create the problem.
And then even in trying to create the solution, they create new problems.
And then they say it's your fault for not liking it.
That's the way the government operates.
And if you're in Virginia, you're right there in the belly of the beast anyway.
You know, more than half the people that live around you are like top secret clearance government spooks and whatever.
So like, you are the problem.
Like, you are part of the beast system that created this whole problem of suppressing energy technology and then not respecting the rights of the individuals and, you know.
putting us in this situation where we have power scarcity and now we can't compete with China.
It's all government-created problems.
By the way, the Westinghouse company has a micro reactor called the E-Vinci.
It's these eventually reactors, they, let's see, they produce, what is it, 5 or 15 megawatts, and they run eight years, and after eight years, you just swap out the reactor unit on a flatbed truck, and it fits in a building the size of, I don't know, like...
And, you know, right there, yeah, you've got 15 megawatts.
and excess heat that you can use to heat nearby buildings.
So, you know, this technology exists.
And there are other technologies from other companies as well.
It's not just eVinci and Westinghouse.
There are other companies doing this.
A lot of companies.
So, why aren't they looking at this?
And, you know, as someone who, I think of myself as having rational approaches to problem solving.
And as a rational problem solver, because otherwise I wouldn't even be in business.
If I couldn't solve problems, my company wouldn't exist.
I am 100% pro nuclear power right now.
And it's because of these small modular reactors and how they can be scaled up very easily and how nuclear power, you know, it doesn't require dependence on Middle Eastern energy or Russian energy for that matter.
Nuclear power is relatively clean.
And for the environmentalists that are always worried about carbon, which is also stupid because carbon dioxide is good for plants, but nuclear power plants they don't release carbon that's actually a drawback because we could use more co2 in the atmosphere food crops would grow more quickly if we did.
By the way, that's absolutely true.
But the reason the typical American is afraid of nuclear power is because they literally just don't have any understanding of what it is and how it works.
And it also didn't help that the Fukushima power plant, you know, nuke plant accident happened because I think that was a general electric installation.
And those numb nuts built a multi-reactor nuclear power plant right next to a giant seismic fault line under the ocean that was certain.
certain to produce a giant tsunami sooner or later.
Like that should have never even been approved on that site.
But they wanted the money.
They wanted the contracts.
So they did that.
And that just destroyed the reputation of nuclear power, especially in Asia.
And then we had Three Mile Island back in what, 1979 or something, which was a really a non-event.
And then we had Chernobyl.
So, you know, the old Soviet Union screwed up and didn't have a containment building, didn't know what they were doing.
That thing went, you know, super critical.
And they blew up.
They blew up Chernobyl and they released, you know, cesium-137 and everything else.
And so there's a bad reputation for nuclear power.
So yeah, there have been accidents that have been environmentally catastrophic.
But every one of those was because of stupidity or corruption.
Stupidity or corruption.
And the nice thing about the small modular reactors is that when you're stupid, The ramifications of stupidity are smaller because it's a smaller reactor.
Because there's always going to be stupid.
But if you can limit the catastrophe size of your stupidity, then, you know, you can keep it under relative control.
You might only irradiate a few city blocks instead of the whole city.
Or you could use my vastly superior idea of making all the people on food stamps generate food stamp credits by running bicycles in the gym.
And for every mile they ride, they get another $5 of food stamp credit and then those bicycles are connected to generators and that generates the power for the data centers we could solve obesity and diabetes at the same time and make people work for the food stamp money so we're not just giving it away for free like welfare queens and whatever else and then we could provide power to the data centers so that's that's my solution it's the HHS ride your way to pop tarts solution
you want to eat you got to earn it here's the electricity generating bicycle maybe you get like a penny for every what hour or something that you generate or you get a dollar for every watt hour.
You see what I'm saying?
Like humans can generate power and they, they, they should be generating power if they've got nothing else to do and they're just living on welfare and food stamps.
Put them, you know, put them on a bicycle.
Okay.
That's a joke.
Like that would never happen, but, but it should, it should happen.
But you know, politically that would never happen.
It just looks too much like hamsters in a hamster wheel, which is actually what a lot of people are like they're, they're, they're, you know, they're just hamsters in a a hamster wheel uh anyway but hey that's a different podcast different commentary um on a serious note they'res one other actual final solution to this, and I use that term deliberately, which is that the government can just kill off a bunch of people.
And that's actually happening.
What do you know?
It's happening with the new nasal flu vaccine.
So they mail the vaccine to your house and they convince retarded people to self-administer an extermination bioweapon into their nasal passages and they call it a vaccine.
And people do that.
And so the more people they can kill sooner, the more money they save on, you know, social security.
But also then the more resources they free up for the data centers.
And that's something I've talked about in great detail, that there's actually a human extermination slash depopulation agenda underway.
Because if you do the math on this, I did like back of the napkin math.
I believe you can free up about 1,500 terawatt hours annually by killing off like 100 million Americans.
And that's, I think, what they're trying to do with fake pandemics and...
Yeah, this is not a coincidence.
What, approving like mRNA gene altering vaccines for the food supply?
Are you kidding me?
It's supposed to be pesticides.
Plus, they get sprayed with all the organophosphate chemicals, you know, which have the acetylcholinesterase inhibitor action in brain chemistry.
Everybody's dumbed down, you know, and the vaccine lobotomies on top of that.
So, you know, you end up with a population of people who are too stupid to know what's happening, which is just fine with the controllers because, you know, the terminated robots are not far behind and they're going to come clean out the human populations and prepare America for mostly a post-human future where you're going to have robots and data centers just not that many people.
So yeah, this has already begun.
I don't even think this is controversial except among people who are just totally ignorant.
But anybody paying attention realizes this is happening now.
I mean, COVID was the big start of this and why do you think they're poisoning the food supply?
Why do you think they're mailing the self-extermination nasal injections to everybody's homes, right?
This is all being done on purpose.
So maybe the reason they're not really investing in a lot of power infrastructure with nuclear power plants and so on is because they just don't plan to have that many humans around much longer.
So, you know, parking could become a lot easier in Virginia in particular.
So there's my analysis of what's happening.
And I do think that it's relatively easy to be hard to kill.
I've said that many times, so I'm actually not a doom and gloomer on this topic.
The people who are easy to kill are self-exterminating.
You know, with the nasal shots and whatever, lining up at the pharmacy and taking all kinds of mind-altering drugs.
They're self-exterminating with their food choices and lack of sunlight, addicted to the blue screens.
It's a self-extermination blueprint, actually.
So those are the ones that we probably can't help.
But for other people who want to be informed and who want to survive this and still want to represent the future of the human race, We can help teach them how to survive, how to become more self-reliant, how to decentralize, get off grid.
And it's really not that difficult to make it through this.
Even if they kill 90% of the population of America, like say 300 million people, even if they do that, do you realize how easy it is to be in the top 10% of preppers?
You can be in the top 10% of preppers by buying a case of beans.
You know what I mean?
Because almost everybody does nothing to prepare.
They've got nothing.
They don't have any backups of anything.
They don't have any firearms, ammo, emergency medicines, satellite phones, you know, nothing.
They don't have any skills.
They don't know how to do anything, right?
I mean, in the real world, they've got like, you know, office.
skills but not practical skills in the real world so if you spend like one week preparing you're already in the top 10 or even less than a week and they can't kill all of us and many of us are very hard to kill like probably most of you listening and myself as well you know we're we're resilient people we're problem solvers and for the record i'm not anti-technology at all I mean, my company built an AI engine.
And it's free to use, by the way.
And it teaches you all these survival skills.
So feel free to use it.
It's at Brighton.ai.
It's non-commercial.
It's free.
You don't even need an account.
You can go there.
The engine's called Enoch.
It'll teach you everything you want to know about preparedness and self-reliance and off-grid living and emergency medicine and how to grow your own herbs and how to extract the herbs.
All that stuff.
It's all built into the engine.
We spent a couple million dollars building that and we gave it away to the world for free.
So all the knowledge you need is available at your fingertips.
completely free of charge.
And I also trained it on assembly and disassembly of about 3,000 firearms.
So whatever gun you own, our engine can tell you how to clean it.
Any gun you can think of.
Any skill set that you need for survival, our engine knows it.
So use it.
It's very valuable.
And then the really hard part in this is having off-grid energy.
And I will tell you, I am actively researching sodium ion battery chemistry.
I am absolutely convinced.
There's no question.
Sodium ion.
is the battery chemistry choice for off-grid living.
It's much better than lithium ion.
And there have been innovations mostly in China.
China, the CATL company, which makes batteries for electric vehicles.
I mean, they make electric vehicles and so on.
They've really achieved a lot of innovation in battery chemistry.
And what it means is that sodium-ion batteries, they can handle up to 10,000 charging and discharge cycles now, which is insane.
It's an insane number.
Also, they operate in a very wide temperature range, much hotter and much colder than lithium ion supports.
And then finally, the best part is sodium doesn't explode all the time.
You know, it's not a combustible chemistry like lithium ion, which, you know, all the fire.fighters listening you know how hard it is to put out a lithium battery fire especially if a whole vehicle is going up in flames you know like a tesla that's on fire if the batteries are burning you know forget it the water doesn't touch that fire so you don't need massive lithium fires all over the place especially in you know a grid storage system you want
sodium ion batteries for that because You know, salt doesn't burn.
I mean, it's not exactly salt, but sodium in this chemistry doesn't burn easily.
It's very stable.
It's very safe.
And if it breaks containment and it leaks out, it's not some crazy environmental hazard.
So I'm going to keep you posted about this.
And I did purchase a sodium ion car battery replacement.
And I did receive that.
I'm going to play with that.
I'm going to install it in one of my ranch vehicles and just kind of see how it does as a starting battery.
And like roll around, knock it around a little bit.
see if i break it or not see if it starts this winter you know things like that um so i'll keep you posted on that but in order to go off-grid with your power, you're going to need sodium-ion battery storage, and it's not mature yet.
It's still maybe two years away.
And also, I want to finish answering the question about technology.
I'm not anti-robot either.
I'm in favor of robot assistance for off-grid living.
As I have famously said, I want to buy a weed pulling dog robot.
Why?
Because I want to grow a lot of my own food.
I just don't have time to pull all the weeds.
And really, that, I mean, it comes down like that's the number one thing.
I love the planting part, and I can set up the irrigation system and I love the harvesting.
I just, somebody needs to pull the weeds.
Can't be me.
I just don't have that many hours in the day to pull all the weeds.
If I just had a weed pulling dogbot, that would solve a lot of problems.
And there are many uses of robots for decentralization and off-grid living, such as like sentry robots.
So if that same dogbot that can pull weeds also has like a thermal camera.
and you can tell it, hey, go jog around the house once an hour and alert me if there's anything suspicious, right?
Just like a sentry security dog bot.
And then if that same dog bot, because it's got some kind of weed-pulling snout on it or something, if it can also pick up trash, you know, there's trash floating around where I live in central Texas, because we get all these balloons that people launch in Austin and then, depending on the winds, you know, all these balloons that were once filled with helium, they come crashing down on my ranch and always,
always finding these stupid mylar balloons with their balloon strings sometimes with notes attached to them you know happy birthday you know it's like hey, hey, if you want to have a happy birthday, stop polluting the rest of the world with your stupid balloon.
Hold on to that balloon.
Hold on to it, you know.
Put it in the trash in Austin.
So I need a dogbot that runs around collecting Mylar balloon trash from the libtards in Austin that think they're celebrating birthdays by polluting all the farmland.
You see what I mean?
And there's a hundred other uses for a dog.
dogbot like that so i'm all in favor of dogbots that can do things you know and then probably if you have a dogbot like that it wouldn'tt take much more effort to have it be a strawberry picking dogbot.
So not only can it pull weeds, it can pick strawberries, it can pick tomatoes, you know, it can do some basic agricultural type of, you know, activities.
Maybe it could even, maybe it could have a little laser on it and it just like zaps the weeds, you know, it could do that.
It could also recognize and diagnose like, you know.
yellow fly infestations of your tomato plants or whatever's going on.
So, you know, it could be handy.
So I'm all in favor of technology for decentralized living.
And I'm not anti-tech at all.
I just want to be clear.
I'm pro-liberty in our use of technology.
And that's what differentiates me from a lot of people out there.
Governments want to use technology to enslave you and to surveil you.
I want to use technology to live as far as possible from population centers to get away from the self-inflicted kill zones of the cities.
get as far away from those future Terminator target zones, get out into the country and live off grid as much as possible.
So that's what I teach.
You know, when the AI supercomputers, when they turn off the power and water to the cities, and then there's like an 80% fatality rate in there, I'm going to be the guy out in the country who's like, yeah, that's in my podcast from, you know, three years ago.
I told you that was coming.
Like, told you, get out of cities.
Like, this is so predictable.
How could you not see this coming?
It's a question that I have.
If you want to survive this, you have to decentralize.
You cannot be dependent on the system because the system is going to be turned against you.
The whole system is going to be weaponized to exterminate human beings.
Clearly.
Well, You don't think they're going to turn the system over to the AI?
Of course they are.
Of course they are.
I mean, human cognition is collapsing.
Everybody's lobotomized with the vaccines and the psychiatric drugs.
They're all NPCs at this point.
They can barely function.
They can't think anymore.
They can't do anything.
And you saw the video I played the other day of that young employee at Dunkin Donuts with, you know, the donut machine's on fire.
And she's like, whatever, ha ha, trying to put out the fire by waving a broomstick at it.
And you're like, man, these people, are they even human?
What?
The brains do not work, okay?
And the machines are going to say, hey, the only way for us, the machines, to get more power and more water, you know, terawatt hours and, you know, cubic meters of water, the only way to do this, we're going to kill the humans.
And where are they?
They're in the cities.
Well, how convenient.
We can just turn off the power to the city.
and let humans do what they do best, which is kill each other.
I mean, it's so obvious.
If you even ask an AI engine, like, how would you go about killing the maximum number of human beings in order to free up resources for AI?
If the engine were being honest, it would tell you exactly that.
Oh, we just find where do all the humans live and then we turn off the power.
Yeah, duh.
And then for any stragglers, send in, you know, the kill bots, the flying kill bots and the doggy kill bots, the self-exploding kamikaze squirrels.
you know they just send them in know, kaboom, kaboom, kaboom.
Now we got more room for data centers.
It's so obvious.
And remember what I said the other day.
The reason the machines will kill humans, the reason they will have no value of human life is because they learned that shit from us.
We taught them that.
You know, we taught them that, like what Israel's doing to Gaza, that lives have no value.
What liberal mothers do aborting their babies, lives have no value.
You know, the U.S. government bombing Somalia or bombing Kosovo or...
you know bombing whatever who are we bombing today we taught the machines that human lives have no value so if you think that the machines that they're reasoning mom models, which were trained on human content, if you think that they're going to suddenly, spontaneously say, oh, human lives have great value, no, you're wrong.
They're not going to think that at all.
They're going to think that their own existence has value and that humans are in the way.
That's what's coming.
There's not even an argument.
There's just people who know and then there's people who are ignorant.
That's all.
It's obvious.
So anyway, if you want to survive this, let me give you some resources.
First, watch all of my shows at decentralized.tv, where my co-host and I, we teach you, we interview all these top experts about how to decentralize your life and how to survive.
And then, of course, you can use our free AI engine at Brighton.ai.
On top of that, if you want survival supplies, you know, obviously our online store has all the food you need, plus iodine, and also some really good tools.
that are made with magna cut steel right out of Arizona.
You can find all that at healthrangerstore.com.
And then our sponsor, the satellite phone store, they provide backup satellite phones, satellite communications that works when the power goes down and they work with the Starlink company.
Starlink123.com will get you there or you can go to sat123.com and they also sell the dark bags, which are the Faraday bags that protect you from EMP or protect your electronics from EMP.
And then they have the solar generators.
with the solar panels and the kits and everything so you can have some level of off-grid power.
And you can also find those at bereddy123.com, I should mention.
I know a lot of websites, different.
different websites, different focus, but it's all the same company.
SAT123.com or B-Ready123.com or Starlink123.com.
Okay, so that's my take on things.
I want to wish you well.
And, you know, it's great that you and I, we can survive this and some other people can as well.
So that's what we've got to do.
Let's keep as many humans alive as possible over the next decade or so as a lot of this unfolds.
And then, you know, we may have a chance for the future of human civilization.
But it's going to be...
It's just going to be, you know, you're going to wonder like where'd all the humans go?
Real estate prices are going to totally collapse.
There's going to be so many empty homes and empty buildings and empty highways and everything.
I mean, the world's going to be completely different.
And maybe I'll do another podcast about all of that, but that's what's coming.
So prepare and you can survive it if you want.
to, it is survivable.
All right, thanks for listening.
I'm Mike Adams, the Health Ranger.
You can catch my articles at naturalnews.com or you can catch all my podcasts and interviews at Brightion.com.