Category Archives: Energy

Windmill Economics 101: When Trump Hates Something, You Know It Must Be Good

I didn’t pay much attention to windmills, to be honest, but all this whining and complaining by Trump has me wondering what’s so good about them.

Well, it turns out a lot. They are cheap at the margin, stable on contract, strongest when the grid is most stressed, and bank tax revenue and jobs while leaving the land working. The economics are entirely sound. The thing fighting them is jealousy and greed, not price. Trump can’t corner a wind market.

Cold snaps already have proven when wind earns its keep. Ocean winds peak in the coldest months, exactly when the New England grid is most constrained and gas is most expensive. Because the East Coast leans so heavily on volatile natural gas, adding cost-stable wind raises supply and holds bills down, and the value shows up clearly during winter electricity crunches. Vineyard Wind’s built portion saved the region roughly $2 million a day during the December 2025 cold snap, per the EDF.

That’s the spot price. The long contract makes it undeniable. Massachusetts says the power purchase agreements will save ratepayers about $1.4 billion over 20 years. And the winter case isn’t a one-off: the Acadia Center estimated offshore wind would have saved New England ratepayers at least $400 million in the winter of 2024–25 by cutting wholesale prices 11% and reducing reliance on volatile gas.

The economics scale because the fuel is free. Onshore wind and solar are among the cheapest new power sources in the US even without subsidies, per Lazard, and once a turbine is built the wind costs nothing, so wind farms undercut gas and coal on wholesale price and pull prices down for everyone. Wind already carries real load: 464.4 terawatt-hours in 2025, about 10.5% of US electricity, the largest renewable source since it passed hydro in 2019.

On the ground it pays rent and wages. Land-based wind delivered nearly $2.7 billion in state and local tax and land-lease payments last year and supports over 383,000 jobs across direct, indirect, and induced roles, with wind turbine technician the fastest-growing job in the country at 50% over the decade. Direct wind employment already runs ahead of oil and gas extraction. The land takes little: turbines and roads occupy about 2% of a project’s area, leaving 98% for farming and ranching.

What’s not to like?

AI Is Not a Fascist Artifact

Several people have asked what I thought when Jürgen Geuter, writing as tante, argued that AI is a fascist artifact.

He’s not saying AI is being deployed badly. He’s saying AI is inherently fascist. He places it in the category Langdon Winner reserved for technologies that demand a particular social order, the way the atom bomb demands a centralized command state. You cannot run that particular bomb democratically. In that sense, tante wants the model in the same classification.

I get it. I typically talk about minefields or cluster bombs as inhumane, and therefore a crime. If we can classify a weapon off limits, we can feel comfortable saying it crosses a bright line.

The problem for me is how his argument refutes itself.

He leans on Stafford Beer’s maxim that the purpose of a system is what it does. As such, tante reads the purpose of AI off its most disgusting and reprehensible deployments. Palantir, an overtly fascist company out to destroy democracy, markets its software as a weapon for kill decisions. Andreessen, an inhumane mockery of tech, demands the right to build without regulation while also demanding regulations that erase its critics. Image models infamously inherit the racism of the data scraped to train them. These deployments are all good examples of the bad, and they are reactionary.

The lean into Beer comes from tante saying he is an admirer. Beer built Project Cybersyn, a centralized computer system meant to coordinate the nationalized economy of Allende’s Chile.

Stafford Beer’s VSM (Viable System Model)

That’s interesting because it’s in the similar class as the bad examples above. Centralized computational coordination of an economy. By tante’s own logic a system is whatever it does, so Cybersyn was socialist because it served socialism. The politics are defined by the person in control and to what end they are aiming.

Record scratch.

This is the applied, contingent politics tante insists does not exist. He cannot endorse the principle that a system is what it does and condemn the model class as fascism in the same breath. That principle is what makes Cybersyn liberatory, and it puts the politics in the operator of the system.

Going back to Winner instead, we should separate two kinds of political technology. For example, when Robert Moses built overpasses so low that large buses carrying poor families could not reach the beach, that was politics by design.

Jones Beach was made inaccessible by bus due to the intentionally low overpasses, like this one. Source: Pin-Up

The bomb is different from the overpass. Its politics are in the functional necessity. In other words, the evidence tante uses is all about the overpass. The frontier vendors would concentrate power because of how it is financed and owned, not because a working model can only exist in a form that prevents poor families from going to the beach.

On that point, we have evidence of models that pass the test. Apertus, from ETH Zurich and EPFL, was pretrained from scratch on rights-clean data. Pleias built its models on the Common Corpus the same way. Run the weights locally through Ollama with no telemetry and no API, and the capability should be free of fascism. And this trend seems like common sense. The model does not need its lab, while the bomb always and still needs the state.

M28/M29 Davy Crockett entered service in May 1961. It fired an “atomic watermelon” with 20 tons of force up to 2.5 miles away, bad news for the operators.

What the bomb actually requires is not centralized command but a centralized means of production: a secret, capital-heavy, state-scale enrichment and weapons base. The Davy Crockett above makes the case clear. The Army handed the trigger to a three-man crew, the most decentralized nuclear launch ever fielded, and it still came out of Los Alamos and the Atomic Energy Commission. You can decentralize the distribution. You cannot decentralize production. Every warhead that has existed came out of that base.

The simple contradictions by tante make me wonder why he didn’t see them. He grants that oppressive tools can be turned against their makers. Ok, so they become good? But then he still tries to land the campaign to destroy AI. Destruction doesn’t follow from the premise that the tool is dual-use. If the politics is in the ownership and operation, the answer is to take ownership and operate another way: public compute, worker control over deployment. Destroy AI foolishly tries to name an enemy, which unfortunately could be the self.

The reactionary political economy of frontier AI is a real problem. The firms deserve the harshest criticism, especially Palantir. Calling the company fascist makes perfect sense to me, but their tools don’t carry the same labels. I’m no more likely to say an LLM has to be fascist than the rest of their compute infrastructure. And I say that because if you follow tante’s very broken and self-defeating logic, we start signaling that to build the alternative is forbidden if not impossible. And that’s simply not true.

The Amish refuse the public grid. The line to the utility is a tether to the outside world, and that relationship as dependence is what they reject. Electricity itself is fine. Build your own windmill, run it locally, and no one objects. The objection was never to electricity itself, which has no political stake. It was to the politics of someone else taking control.

Paid in Full: The Data Center Economy and the Criminalized Protester

A Trump government contract reached the public last month by accident, after CoreCivic’s lawyers attached it to an email to the Houston Chronicle. The figures it revealed put the cost of running Dilley, the only family detention center in the country, at about $15.6 million a month, $13.1 million to operate and $2.5 million for medical care. The cost to taxpayers has been made constant, whether the facility is full or nearly empty.

The problem has been known much longer. A ICE itself called the Dilley arrangement unique, a fixed monthly fee for the entire facility regardless of how many people are held. A Homeland Security inspector general found the contract improperly obtained, routed through a middleman town in a way that shielded the operator and left the agency with no assurance it served taxpayers or detainees.

Pay for prisoners was improper, unaccountable, and fixed to a building. Why?

Look deeper, into the context, the geography, and the care model of “centers”. The human detention operator collects the same sum whether their water is clean or not, whether a sick child is seen or left unseen (to die). Lawmakers who toured in May counted fewer than 400 people, including 93 children, and ran the division.

Taxpayers are being charged roughly $37,500 per detained person per month.

Most people being held carry no criminal charge, and many have active asylum claims being ignored. They are being seized on streets far from any border, like the five year old taken outside his Minnesota home. The revenue is the purpose of these centers, not justice, not safety. CoreCivic reported $116.5 million in profit for 2025, up nearly 70 percent, and guided investors higher. Dilley alone generated $180 million in revenue, inside a $45 billion congressional expansion of detention. The same record documents a measles outbreak and food and water detainees call moldy and foul. A toddler died, after release in the facility’s earlier years.

This is a known pattern in history.

It’s the ordinary shape of administered harm. Atrocity at scale rarely sustains itself as spectacle. Spectacle draws resistance, so the apparatus migrates into procurement within an already established, rushed trajectory. The lethal variable to watch for is a revenue line uncoupled from the human outcome, a fixed fee or a quota that pays the same whether the people inside are tended or neglected. The pattern is neglect performing the harm within a trajectory so no one has to authorize it. It’s been called the crematorium that needs no fire.

Germans study the history that Americans rarely understand. In 1933 voices of opposition were violently erased, leading to the “cold crematorium” of camps that killed by willful neglect.

The evidence tends to precede the public reckoning, because it’s unbelievable, too hard for people to process until it’s too late. On December 9, 1931, a Munich newspaper printed a leaked Nazi plan for the Jews and the euphemism, Endlösung. The “final solution” was known long before the regime would invade neighboring countries and spin up industrialized murder camps. The paper was attacked for saying it, then shut down violently, its reporters sent to Dachau, the first Nazi concentration camp, built to detain and break the regime’s political opponents, where many were murdered.

Memorial block for Richard Lipinski, a well known Leipzig SPD politician who voted against Hitler “Enabling Act” in 1933 and was put into “protective custody” and died from “effects of his detention”. Phrases that to this day try to normalize fascism, literal murder for power.

Administered harm shows up like a payment schedule, for outcomes that should be raising the highest alarms. Notably, Britain read the warnings through the 1930s and held back from stopping Hitler in March 1936, when his troops entered the Rhineland under orders to retreat if France resisted. London and Paris accommodated instead of attacked. Why did they wait?

This contract just became public because a lawyer attached the wrong file to an email. Who today sees it and waits? What are they waiting for?

Target Hospitality owns the Dilley family detention center and runs its food service, the place notorious for a measles outbreak and 911 calls about children struggling to breathe. CoreCivic operates it. In March, Target announced a pivot into data center company towns, to wash the stink of the ICE deal off its name. The lodging contractor moved its brand from feeding and housing a detention center to housing the crews who build data centers.

When you look at the datacenter maps, you are looking at land permits, a slab, tilt-up walls, and a power easement that may never energize. Very large campuses of empty boxes on cheap land in scarce-water country, their end use left unsettled.

Source: Brockovich Data Centers

A July 2025 executive order made the data centers critical infrastructure. Federal agencies and fusion centers then began tracking fictional “anti-tech violent extremism,” sweeping peaceful critics and town-hall attendees into the framework built to criminalize protected political speech into domestic violent extremists. The order protects the box, which rhymes with the detention economy, even when it does not yet show a data center becoming a human center. Oppose the data center box, and the security state opens a terrorism file.

A terrorism designation of people outside the data centers feeds the same detention expansion that the Dilley contract pays for. It’s like a fascist LEGO set: build the box, file the objector as a terrorist, fund detention that pays whether the beds fill or not, and the only open question left is how all those unpopular empty boxes will be making any money.

“500% Less”: How Elon Musk Math Fuels Trump

Let’s set aside the fact that what Elon Musk says about cars is a provable lie.

Focus on his math here.

Source: Twitter

over 500% *less*

That’s Elon Musk math. On fire safety.

Now look at Trump, November 2025, announcing the GLP-1 deal with “tremendous cuts, 200 percent, 300 percent, 500 percent, 700 percent and even more than that”. Then in his prime-time address he claimed negotiated reductions of 400 to 600%, with the July version running to drug price cuts of as much as 1,500 percent, numbers he himself called beyond what anyone thought achievable.

These grifters, obviously operating as cruel con-men, converged in the public eye and then… kept on grifting.

A percentage decrease past 100 means the drug seller pays you to take it, or that the Tesla extinguishes nearby fires.

Idiots?

No. Historians study how Hitler used a strategy of being considered an idiot, a clown, to disarm his targets and kill them.

“Parked Teslas Keep Catching on Fire Randomly, And There’s No Recall In Sight” –The Drive 2019
Source: tesla-fire.com

The problem in the West isn’t just one man, one speech, one product. The problem is how markets run unregulated, without sufficient safety against those spreading hate through “free speech extremist” tactics of targeted fraud.

Now let’s talk reality.

The US fleet baseline is vehicles with a median age over twelve years, plus arson, plus parked junkers, plus carbureted antiques. Out of that ancient and often unmaintained fleet, electric fires are a leading or second cause of fires. Electric fires, as in combustion engines have batteries and wires that start fires. Take the combustion away and you still have the exact same cause of the fire. Electric fires.

The NFPA cause data for highway vehicle fires puts electrical distribution and mechanical failure at the top of ignition sources. The gasoline is the accelerant, rarely the ignition. Fuel tanks don’t spontaneously combust; frayed wiring harnesses, failed alternators, and leaking fluids onto hot exhaust do the igniting. So Musk spread dangerous lies, as his “massive amounts of highly flammable fuel” framing inverts the mechanism. An EV carries both the energy store and the electrical system, and when the energy store itself enters thermal runaway you get a fire that reignites for days and resists suppression.

Tesla is the massive amounts of highly flammable fuel (volatile chemical cells), with a known unsafe and unnecessary design flaw. Read the “nail in Tesla coffin” report, and you will see how and why other electric car makers don’t burn. Fire is a big Tesla problem.

Teslas, at the time Musk blew the most smoke about fire, were almost all under five years old, garaged, owned by affluent early adopters who didn’t know enough about him or cars in general to see the fraud. New gasoline cars, excluding electrical causes of fire, against Teslas was the honest comparison. More to the point, Tesla engineering grows worse over time, so their design flaws not only don’t get investigated, they compound and increase in likelihood and severity.