Emily Abadi
π€ SpeakerAppearances Over Time
Podcast Appearances
And that's an experience for them where they can contrast and compare what they're being told with then what they see in the story.
And it's one of those things.
I think one of the big reasons, Sagar, that support has declined for Israel and the United States is that people,
because of social media, not because of foreign ops, but because of a lot of accurate information that is bypassing the media gatekeepers, because of a lot of that, they have been able to compare what they were told for a really long time with some actual videos, some actual testimonies, and listen,
People can make up their own minds.
Jacob Kingston grew up in an isolated polygamous sect.
We were God's chosen kingdom on earth.
He felt destined for greatness.
Wait a minute, Dakota.
She filed a kidnapping report against him in his own police station.
Well, speaking of data centers, we have this video that we can start rolling.
It's going to be β this is a data center, and you can hear β
the noise.
People may have seen some of these videos going viral on social media, but I'm going to ask a little bit about what this could mean for the bubble question.
Actually, let's roll the clip.
So, Derek, obviously what we've seen is a cratering political support for data centers around the country.
And we could debate whether or not people are correct in some of their assumptions about water and electricity and the like.
But the fact of the matter is these are becoming political albatrosses for the companies that have pushed them time and again in different localities.
And I'm curious.
What you make of the question of how much that matters for these companies' ability to deliver if there starts to be a real uphill climb just to build these data centers and to get them in action?