• melsaskca@lemmy.ca
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    7 hours ago

    trumps team investigating trumps buddies. We all know what’s going on and the pretense that we are still living in a stable world is unbelievable.

  • anon_8675309@lemmy.world
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    5 hours ago

    It is a priority to ensure that water quality standards established by EPA are being met. And so, we’ll be looking into that, certainly.

    They will, of course, lower the standards.

    • BorgDrone@feddit.nl
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      7 hours ago

      It’s a bit disingenuous to only report the negatives sides to this.

      Sure, AI will take your job, pollute the environment and flood the internet with fake news to manipulate the population and make things worse for the ordinary citizen. But that’s just one side of the story, things are not as black and white as they are claimed to be.

      Have you even considered the upside of this? AI will generate amazing short-term profits for the shareholders. They may even be able to buy a fifth home or a third yacht. If you put it like that, it suddenly doesn’t seem as bad, does it?

      /s

  • Jax@sh.itjust.works
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    20 hours ago

    congresswoman

    Put some fucking respect on her name, it was Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez.

  • ClownStatue@piefed.social
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    16 hours ago

    But all those voters in that town laughing all the way to the… hmm. What did they get out of that data center deal? A handful of jobs? No increase in the tax base? Higher power bills? Hang on a sec, is Donald Trump on a city council in Georgia? Did I miss that?

    • ChunkMcHorkle@lemmy.world
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      21 hours ago

      That actually had me wondering. This is about Georgia. AOC is a gem, but why is it a NY rep bringing this to the EPA and not that town’s own congressional rep?

      So I looked it up in the article, which never names the town nor its congressional representative but refers to Morgan County, Georgia multiple times. (The author goes out of their way to talk around various glaring facts; this is one of them.) So I looked up Morgan County, Georgia, which is in Georgia’s 10th congressional district, and is currently represented by Republican Mike Collins.

      And there it is. Mike Collins is himself the answer as to why it’s AOC, a congresswoman from New York, holding up a jar of muddy water in Congress on behalf of the citizens of rural Georgia that he was elected to represent.

        • ChunkMcHorkle@lemmy.world
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          19 hours ago

          Truth. And AOC is the best of them. But that doesn’t let Trump’s little MAGA culture warrior off the hook. This is the Laken Riley Act guy.

          If I were in Georgia’s 10th and had a mind to run, I’d wipe the floor with commercials showing AOC representing the 10ths need for clean water and physically holding up that jar of muddy water in Congress on their behalf, interspersed with shots of Collins’ own social media and deepfaked AI ads against Jon Ossoff illustrating what he’s really been busy with, and asking why he’s nowhere around when they simply need clean water.

          • luciferofastora@feddit.org
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            12 hours ago

            TIL about that law. Apparently it

            requires the detention, without bond, of non-citizens, who are arrested for, charged with, or admit to committing certain crimes, including theft, burglary, larceny, shoplifting

            Arrested for meaning before due process? So if they claim that you were shoplifting and you fail to prove that you actually are a citizen (or they pretend you never proved), they lock you up without recourse for the vicious crime of shopping while non-white?

  • DaddleDew@lemmy.world
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    1 day ago

    Wait for billionaire Zuck to make a quick phone call to Trump followed by a “donation” and the EPA will say that there is nothing wrong with the water.

  • Sandbar_Trekker@lemmy.today
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    1 day ago

    The title is missing a significant keyword here: “construction”

    A more accurate headline:

    Meta data center construction allegedly muddies Georgia town’s drinking water, investigation underway — EPA promises immediate investigation after congresswoman brings dirty jars of water to hearing

    This isn’t exclusive to datacenters, any sort of large construction projects should be under the microscope right now. If there are legal loopholes allowing water supplies to be contaminated, that should be addressed. Meta and any other companies responsible for this should be billed the costs for cleaning up or for funding additional water treatment solutions to make up for this.

  • binux@sh.itjust.works
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    24 hours ago

    Meta in court (for the 900th time): Your honour, what doesn’t kill you makes you stronger

  • Korhaka@sopuli.xyz
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    1 day ago

    How do they even manage that, is there no filtration at all for the water supply or have they been pumping dirty water back in - which shouldn’t be allowed even if it was clean.

    • Ludicrous0251@piefed.zip
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      1 day ago

      Not an expert but I believe some municipalities (and some older homes) rely on well water with pretty minimal treatment. This is usually fine because the water moves through the well system so slowly everything naturally filters, but if you suddenly have a data center or fracking system forcing orders of magnitude more water through the ecosystem than was originally designed, those natural filtration systems start to fail catastrophically.

      • Addv4@lemmy.world
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        1 day ago

        Not only that, but if there are chemicals in that water that can’t be filtered, that’s just in the well water now. As someone who grew up on well water in the country, that’s terrifying, as you aren’t gonna get water pumped in at a price that is viable. Especially when you realize most of rural Georgia is like that (same with a lot of southern states).

    • Sandbar_Trekker@lemmy.today
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      1 day ago

      From a quick search, it looks like the construction site is here: Meta Stanton Springs Data Center #2 https://cartes.app/?allez=Meta+Stanton+Springs+Data+Center+%25232|w1282590996|-83.67669|33.59840

      It’s very close to a number of streams/creeks that feed into lakes and other water sources nearby.

      With the amount of vegetation that has been removed, all it takes is a good rainy day to have a lot of that mud running off into the water supply.

  • MehBlah@lemmy.world
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    20 hours ago

    Don’t know if its the same thing since municipal wells are usually deeper than private wells. My grandpa had a well that was only three hundred feet deep. One summer there was a drought and he used well water to keep his forty acres of crops, mostly potatoes alive. His water turned brown when he drained the well down more than usual. By November it was back to normal. It could be the stress that horrible facility has put on the local water table that has caused this and wont stop until they are stopped.

  • Prove_your_argument@piefed.social
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    1 day ago

    So I don’t know the specifics here and I don’t doubt there is substantial environmental impact.

    Do want to point out though that whenever my area has construction on water pipes we often have a flush water notice where we need to basically run our taps to flush out dirt and debris that got in during construction. Several pipes in my neighborhood were replaced in the past couple of years and we had to do it every few months. I could see that being the cause here too, if the neighborhoods are anywhere near said water pipe construction.

    I do doubt the EPA will do jack about any of it. They might go out and do some survey and shake down the organization funding the work for a bribe, but there’s no way they’re gonna stop it if they pay up in those closed door conversations.