- melsaskca@lemmy.caEnglish3 hours
“Let’s see…oh…sorry, but all of the officials in this area have already been paid off.”
- zebidiah@lemmy.caEnglish3 hours
People elect clowns and then act surprised when they get a pie in the face…
oh_@lemmy.worldEnglish
5 hoursStole. The correct word is stole. Nice to know the officials got the proper bribes. Nothing to see here.
Eternal192@anarchist.nexusEnglish
12 hoursBecause their pockets are full of bribes, they need to spend some of it before they can do anything and “officials” that refuse to fight and protect those that they represent should be removed from office.
myrmidex@belgae.socialEnglish
4 hoursI’d go one further: If
bribinglobbying was proven, the politicians should not only be removed, they should also be just as liable for damages as the company is/should be. Eternal192@anarchist.nexusEnglish
35 minutesThat’s why so many laws and a lot of intentional loopholes were created so they can protect themselves and the best way to fight this kind of corruption is the Luigi way, the infestation is serious, time to call pest control.
- meco03211@lemmy.worldEnglish13 hours
I’ll siphon millions of gains of water myself then. Then I can sell it to the data center at a premium markup! It’s foolproof.
- hume_lemmy@lemmy.caEnglish5 hours
They’re still cool! Because of the water they stole for their cooling systems.
- Sandbar_Trekker@lemmy.todayEnglish11 hours
Some important context here:
QTS told Politico the 29 million gallons were consumed during temporary construction activities, including concrete work, dust control, and site preparation. The company markets a “closed-loop” cooling system for its data centers, which recirculates the same water rather than drawing from the municipal supply.
- nublug@piefed.blahaj.zoneEnglish2 hours
construction projects don’t usually use secret unmetered hookups the water company doesn’t know about, bud.
some important context here: almost every comment from above user is correcting the record in ai posts like this.
joe@lemmy.worldEnglish
5 hoursThat context isn’t important at all, unless you’re implying that the correction is wrong or misleading.
I think it’s useful to bring attention to the fact that this isn’t water being used by the data center for operations, but for its construction.
And let’s be real, there’s a ridiculous amount of misinformation surrounding co-called “AI”, both pro and con. Someone providing context and clarification isn’t something I’d complain about. (With the caveats above.)
- [deleted]@piefed.worldEnglish3 hours
I think it’s useful to bring attention to the fact that this isn’t water being used by the data center for operations, but for its construction.
Oh, I guess them stealing 29 million gallons of water is fine because it was during construction then. Great point, not completely ridiculous.
joe@lemmy.worldEnglish
3 hoursCalm down, pal. No one said that at all. If all you have is strawmen maybe sit this one out.








