In the movie Scarface, Tony Montana famously explains, “In this country, you gotta make the money first. Then when you get the money, you get the power.” It turns out that in the age of AI data centers, even money can’t always buy one power. The existing grid doesn’t have enough supply to keep up with demand. That’s forcing many deep-pocketed tech companies to get high on their own power supplies as they add more and more data centers. “Most tech titans would be happy to trade their DIY sourcing for the ability to plug into the electric grid. But supply-chain snarls and permitting challenges are complicating everything, and the U.S. isn’t building transmission infrastructure or power plants fast enough to meet the sudden surge in demand for electricity. America should be adding about 80 gigawatts of new power generation capacity a year to keep pace with AI as well as cloud computing, crypto, industrial demand and electrification trends, according to consulting and technology firm ICF. It’s currently building less than 65 gigawatts. That gap alone is enough electricity to power two Manhattans during the hottest parts of summer.” WSJ (Gift Article): AI Data Centers, Desperate for Electricity, Are Building Their Own Power Plan. “Planning and building large-scale power plants or expanding grid infrastructure takes years. The process, normally gummed up, is even more difficult lately. Projects of all kinds face hurdles obtaining permits, equipment shortages, a labor crunch and rising costs, exacerbated by Trump’s tariffs on steel and aluminum, as well as some copper products.” 2The Long Harm of the Law“It was a common enough example of second-term Trump theater-in-the-Oval. But it was also a diorama of the administration’s lopsided power dynamic between a president bent on controlling federal law enforcement and appointees unwilling or unable to fight for the historic independence of their institutions.” Trump keeps naming new targets for his weaponized institutions to target. And they keep doing it. As Jack Smith, one of his latest targets, explains: “Nothing like what we see now has ever gone on.” So we sure as hell better not normalize the behavior (or our coverage of it). NYT (Gift Article): Trump Names More Foes He Wants Prosecuted as Bondi and Patel Look On. 3Stacking the Cards“As American consumers become more economically stratified, the business of issuing credit cards to the rich has turned into big-game hunting for banks. The richest 10% of US households—those making roughly $250,000 or more—now account for almost half the country’s consumer purchases.” That’s one big reason why credit card companies are targeting big spenders in the perk war of 2025. Amanda Mull in Bloomberg (Gift Article): Inside the Credit Card Battle to Win America’s Richest Shoppers. 4I’m Pacing MyselfFive Times Sit to Stand. Maximal Walking Speed. According to Gretchen Reynolds in WaPo (Gift Article), these are the 2 quick tests can tell you if you’re as fit as an 80-year-old elite athlete. I live in an extremely hilly neighborhood. I don’t know if my 80-plus year-old neighbors who regularly pass my beagles and me on the way up hills are elite athletes, but they seem like it compared to us. 5Extra, ExtraVen Diagram: “The helicopters were engaged in training exercises, according to a U.S. official, that could serve as preparation for expanded conflict against alleged drug traffickers, including potentially missions inside Venezuela.” A day after Trump announced covert operations against Venezuela, WaPo(Gift Article) reports U.S. Special Operations helicopters near Venezuela expand Caribbean mission. 6Bottom of the News“The J.M. Smucker Co. is suing Trader Joe’s, alleging the grocery chain’s new frozen peanut butter and jelly sandwiches are too similar to Smucker’s Uncrustables in their design and packaging.” (Seems like a lot TJ’s products are a little too similar to existing brands. But maybe imitating the great Uncrustable is biting off too much.) |