Tomorrow's tech news, today's hangover.

Public Use, Private Hunger

I have never owned enough land for a power company to steal.

This is not virtue. It is arithmetic. I rented rooms where the wallpaper peeled off in strips wide enough to use as surrender flags. I rented apartments where the pipes knocked all night and the landlord answered repair calls with the grave silence of God. Once I had a patch of dirt behind a building where three tomatoes came up. Two were eaten by something smarter than me. The third tasted of exhaust.

So I am not a property man.

But I understand the word mine.

A toothbrush can be mine. A bad poem can be mine. A scar, a debt, a Saturday afternoon nobody has yet sold to an employer. Human life is mostly a fight to keep a few nouns attached to the right pronoun.

Now the machine needs electricity, and electricity needs wires, and wires need somewhere to stand. That somewhere may be your field, your woods, your fence line, your view from the kitchen, the strip of earth where you buried the dog because the children wanted him close.

The companies will begin with an offer.

They always begin with an offer. An easement, they call it. A clean word. Almost musical. It means they get to cross what you thought was yours, and you get money calculated by people who already know which answer they prefer.

You can say no.

That is one of the decorative freedoms.

If the line is important enough, the state may arrive behind the company carrying eminent domain, the old royal hammer we keep under the Constitution for roads, schools, reservoirs, and whatever else can be squeezed into the words public use.

The new question is whether a private data center belongs in that sentence.

The answer will be dressed carefully. Nobody will say we are taking your land so a corporation can make a chatbot write warmer insurance denials. They will say grid reliability. National security. Economic development. The future.

The future is the best trespasser in America. It enters every room without knocking and sends the bill to whoever was already there.

There are more than three thousand data centers in the country and another fifteen hundred coming. In 2024 they swallowed more than four percent of the nation’s electricity. Seven out of ten Americans say they do not want AI data centers near them. This is called public resistance by people who never call the data centers private appetite.

The appetite needs power.

Power needs the line.

The line needs your no to become a yes with paperwork.

We have seen this trick before. In New London, Connecticut, homes were taken for development around a Pfizer facility. The Supreme Court allowed it. The promised redevelopment never came. Pfizer left. The law stayed long enough to watch the dream pack its bags.

That is the fine print in the American idea of progress: the bulldozer is real even when the future is speculative.

A projected benefit can evict an actual life.

The company may fail. The model may become obsolete. The great AI boom may turn into the great AI yard sale, with server racks going cheap and executives explaining that nobody could have predicted gravity. But the family photo taken on the porch does not grow its house back. The trees do not climb out of the sawdust. The line does not apologize for believing the forecast.

Forty-five states tightened their eminent-domain laws after that Connecticut obscenity. Some state courts have said private development is not enough. Other courts have allowed power companies to take land when the wires help customers or strengthen the grid. Lawyers will argue over who receives one watt and where. Good. Let them argue until their tongues wear flat.

But I know how the argument changes once the people with the maps have decided the line is necessary.

Necessary is a word that lifts weights for money.

At the post office, every bad order was necessary. Overtime was necessary. Speed was necessary. Cutting a route was necessary. The supervisor never said his bonus was necessary, but language has its shy spots.

The worker’s back was optional.

Your land will meet the same grammar.

Their project will be essential. Your objection will be emotional. Their estimate will be rigorous. Your memory of the place will be anecdotal. Their lawyers will discuss system needs. You will mention the creek where your father taught you to fish, and somebody will note that the proposed route minimizes impact.

Minimizes.

There is a word built by a man who never had to stand where the minimizing happens.

I am not against electrical lines. I enjoy light. I like refrigerators, elevators, hospital machines, and the modest miracle of a fan turning during a mean July night. A grid is public because everybody leans on it, especially the people who cannot buy generators, private wells, and second homes beyond the noise.

That is precisely why the companies should have to prove the public gets more than crumbs.

If a line keeps a town’s hospital alive, that is one argument. If it crosses a farm so a private warehouse of chips can produce synthetic sales emails faster, that is another. Calling both infrastructure does not make them twins. A hearse and an ice-cream truck both have wheels.

This is where private need enters the courthouse and walks out wearing public use.

The machine did not choose the route. It did not hire the lobbyist. It did not ask a judge to translate corporate hunger into civic necessity. People did that. People bring the machine into the room afterward, clean and innocent, so nobody has to look directly at the hand on the deed.

The old theft took your property because a king wanted it.

The modern theft sends a consultant to explain that you wanted it too.

That is the intellectual miracle beneath the electrical one. Not making a machine talk. Making its hunger sound collective.

Some morning a landowner will unfold a letter at the kitchen table. The letter will explain compensation, necessity, authority, procedure, rights. It will be polite. Politeness is cheaper than permission.

Outside, the field will still belong to him.

Inside the envelope, it will already be speaking another pronoun.


Source: When can a power company take your land for a data center?

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