
Americans now say they'd rather live next to a nuclear reactor than an AI data center. That's not a fringe view — a Gallup poll published this month found 71% of Americans oppose a data center near their home, versus 53% for nuclear. Nuclear carries Chernobyl, Three Mile Island, and forty years of films about radiation in the cultural zeitgeist. The fact that AI data centers have only been a visible part of suburban America for less than five years yet are this hated, is huge. In this episode of In The Loop, I'm looking at the organised opposition movement that has already blocked over $85 billion in planned data center investment — cancelling projects faster in three years than nuclear opposition managed in fifteen. I go through the legal strategy that's winning in courts and at ballot boxes, what the communities are right about, where they're factually wrong, and why the responsible data center model that could resolve this already exists — but nobody's requiring it.⏭️ Episode highlights(01:05) – Missouri council wiped out 8 days after data center vote(02:30) – The Gallup poll: nuclear vs AI data centers(03:45) – $3 trillion buildout and the AI electricity consumption numbers(05:15) – The legal template that stopped nuclear — working again in Virginia(06:50) – What the opposition gets factually wrong on data center water usage(08:10) – Who actually pays — and which communities bear the cost(09:35) – The responsible data center model that already exists
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