The global race to dominate artificial intelligence is no longer just about technology, chips, or economic power. It is increasingly becoming an environmental battle — one that ordinary communities are beginning to feel in their drinking water, electricity bills, and local ecosystems. Recently, Congresswoman Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez brought this concern directly into the political spotlight. During congressional testimony, she displayed jars of discolored drinking water collected from Morgan County, Georgia, near Meta’s Stanton Springs data center campus. According to residents, the water quality began deteriorating after construction started in 2020, involving large-scale blasting and clear-cutting operations. Families reportedly turned to bottled water, appliances broke down due to contamination, and local officials warned that water bills could increase by nearly 33 percent. Her testimony reflects a larger reality: the invisible infrastructure powering artificial intelligence may be creating visible environmental damage. Data centers are the backbone of the modern AI revolution. Every chatbot query, AI-generated image, cloud storage request, or streaming recommendation requires massive computational power. But behind the sleek digital experience lies a physical reality of enormous server warehouses consuming electricity and water at unprecedented levels. According to the Environmental and Energy Study Institute, a medium-sized data center can consume as much as 110 million gallons of water annually, primarily for cooling systems. AI-focused facilities require even more energy because advanced processors generate extreme heat during operation. Cooling those systems has become one of the greatest environmental challenges of the AI era. The environmental impact extends beyond water usage. Massive land clearing for construction destroys local vegetation and wildlife habitats. Backup diesel generators release pollutants into the air. Power demand from data centers is also increasing dependence on fossil-fuel-based electricity grids in many regions, undermining climate goals. In parts of the United States, residents have already started questioning whether communities are sacrificing environmental safety for corporate expansion. In Arizona, local activists raised concerns about data centers worsening drought conditions. In Virginia — home to the world’s largest concentration of data centers — citizens have protested against rising energy consumption, noise pollution, and strain on local infrastructure. The issue is not limited to America. Around the world, governments are competing aggressively to attract AI infrastructure investment, often without fully addressing environmental risks. China recently launched what it describes as the world’s first fully commercial offshore underwater data center near Shanghai’s Lingang Special Area. The $226 million project uses seawater cooling and offshore wind energy to reduce emissions and land pressure. Supporters argue that such innovations could make AI infrastructure more sustainable. Yet critics warn that underwater systems may create new ecological uncertainties for marine environments, including thermal pollution and long-term ecosystem disruption. Meanwhile, Ireland has struggled with soaring electricity demand from tech facilities. Data centers reportedly account for a growing share of the country’s national power consumption, forcing debates over whether energy should prioritize homes or tech corporations. Singapore temporarily paused approvals for new data centers due to concerns about energy and water sustainability before reopening under stricter environmental conditions. Even public opinion reflects increasing anxiety. A recent survey by the Pew Research Center found that people hold more negative than positive views regarding data centers’ effects on the environment, nearby quality of life, and home energy costs. Many residents fear that while technology companies earn billions, local communities are left with depleted resources and environmental degradation. Supporters of AI infrastructure argue that technological growth is unavoidable and economically necessary. Data centers create jobs, attract investment, and drive innovation in healthcare, transportation, and education. That argument is valid. Artificial intelligence will likely define the next industrial era. However, economic progress without environmental accountability is unsustainable. Governments worldwide are now facing a difficult question: how can they balance technological advancement with ecological protection? Stronger environmental regulations, transparent water-use reporting, renewable energy mandates and community oversight may become essential as AI expansion accelerates. The AI revolution promises extraordinary convenience and economic transformation. But if its foundations are built on exhausted water supplies, damaged ecosystems, and rising public distrust, the cost may ultimately outweigh the benefits. The future of artificial intelligence should not come at the expense of the planet that sustains it. Acknowledgement: The opinions expressed in this article are those of the individual author, not necessarily Our National Conversation as a whole
From October 2022 to May 2025, more women approved of the Democratic party than not, but nowadays, it has become the opposite (https://apnews.com/projects/polling-tracker/). Still, most women are consistently disapproving of the Republican party. Are female ideas of politics expanding outside of the typical two parties? Many women, including myself, may be feeling limited by political discourse, and these statistics demonstrate that despite partisan identification, people are beginning to feel overwhelmed by the system altogether. This is likely due to both modern and traditional institutions both failing to keep our interests prioritized. It’s arguable that the women of today want to be freed from generational chains, but we fear making new ones. While conservative and religious institutions often have issues of sexual assault and abuse, promotion of extremist gender norms, limitations on our livelihoods, and neglect towards women altogether, modern institutions are feeding women with a poisoned spoon. Sexualization of our existences and commercialization of our sexuality are two rampant issues in modernist political spaces. For example, collegiate culture has increasingly intensified in these problems, shifting from academic prosperity to an image of alcoholic vanity. We can take from this the understanding that both the Democrat’s party aestheticism and the Republicans’ don’t have our interests in mind. Additionally, it’s important to note that these issues are not issues with the ideals themselves, but with the parties’ inability to solve women’s gripes with the system. It’s an educated guess to say that many women do not want either party. We want to be college educated, make new experiences outside of our homes, and enjoy rights of our own, but we don’t want to be a tool for the industry. An ideal existence for many women is one where we have our liberty and our groundedness. It’s unfortunate to say that both Republican traditionalists and Democratic modernists want us to choose between having a beautiful family and a picket fence or having a degree and a career that gives us mental stimulation and fulfillment. What’s to make of this? Well, this adds to the expanding list of rationales for why the two party system is increasingly unpopular among Generation-Z. Beyond polarization’s strong negative effects on our ability to function as a society, it perpetrates gender discrimination in both expected and unexpected forms. Acknowledgement: The opinions expressed in this article are those of the individual author, not necessarily Our National Conversation as a whole
Recently, videos have been surfacing on the internet of speakers at college graduation ceremonies being booed by students whenever AI was mentioned or praised in their speeches. It has recently been the central focus of commencement speeches, despite being widely unpopular with Gen Z. During a graduation ceremony in Arizona, an AI name-reading system allegedly skipped the names of hundreds of graduates as they walked across the stage. The students who were skipped had already turned in their name cards before the ceremony, yet their names were not properly announced. The college’s president, Tiffany Hernandez, apologized for the error, stating, “We’re using a new AI system.” Video footage of the event shows the crowd loudly booing after the incident. The school later apologized for the error; however, that did not change the fact that many graduates’ big moment of walking across the stage and receiving their degree was tarnished by a faulty AI system. In another incident, commencement speaker Gloria Caulfield, vice president of strategic alliances at Tavistock Group, told graduates that AI is the “next industrial revolution,” while speaking at the University of Central Florida’s College of Arts and Humanities and Nicholson School of Communication and Media. Caulfield was met with a hostile reaction and thousands of booing students, specifically humanities and communications graduates, who will surely struggle to find a job in the current market, gutted by AI. One audience member even yelled back, “AI sucks.” Additionally, Eric Schmidt, the former CEO of Google, was equally met with hisses and boos during his commencement speech at the University of Arizona. Schmidt stated, “The question is not whether AI will shape the world. It will. The question is whether you will have shaped artificial intelligence — You will help shape artificial intelligence.” These statements sparked immediate backlash, as the crowd booed in disapproval until he concluded his speech. Many are calling these commencement speakers’ remarks tone-deaf and out of touch. Overall, the situation proves how little Gen Z actually cares about the push for AI. Despite CEOs and big corporations’ attempts to push the AI boom, young people, especially those entering the workforce, do not want it at all. Young people are the future, and at present, the future says no.
By Alexandra Miskewitz
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