Good morning.

Thursday in Whitewater will be partly cloudy with a high of 52. Sunrise is 5:50 and sunset is 7:54 for 14 hours 4 minutes of daytime. The moon is a waxing gibbous with 98.6 percent of its visible disk illuminated.
On this day in 1789, on the balcony of Federal Hall on Wall Street in New York City, George Washington takes the oath of office to become the first President of the United States.
In Wisconsin, there are now over 50 data centers. This libertarian blogger has not opposed data centers; on the contrary, I’ve contended that they should be left up to each community without state interference. (See from 1.13.26: ‘I’d argue for as little state regulation as possible, leaving counties and cities with the choice of whether they’d prefer a data center in their community. The rush to build data centers may not last, and the centers may take markedly different shapes from one proposal to another.’)
My view, however, is a minority view1 on the topic. The latest Marquette Law School Poll, in a nationwide survey, included questions about data centers and artificial intelligence. The results are clear:
A substantial majority (69%) of adults say the costs of data centers outweigh their benefits, while 30% say the benefits are greater. This represents an increase in skepticism about data centers since January, when 62% saw costs as greater than benefits and 37% said benefits are greater.
This opposition is bipartisan, with 62% of Republicans, 76% of Democrats, and 73% of independents saying the costs are greater than the benefits. This opinion increased across each partisan group. In January, 53% of Republicans, 70% of Democrats, and 65% of independents saw costs greater than benefits.
Doubts over the costs of data centers are only slightly related to income, education, age, or region of the country. Liberals are more likely to say the costs outweigh the benefits than are conservatives, but majorities of all ideological groups think the costs are greater.
See Marquette Law School Poll survey, April 23, 2026.
The Marquette Poll observes a relationship between opposition to data centers and dislike of artificial intelligence:
Views of data centers are strongly related to views of artificial intelligence. Seventy percent of adults say the development of AI is a bad thing for society, and 30% say it is a good thing. Of those who think AI is a good thing, 62% say the benefits outweigh the costs of data centers. Among those who say AI is a bad thing, 83% say the costs outweigh the benefits.
Even a majority of people who have used large language models in AI programs think artificial intelligence is bad for society:
Those who say they have used an AI app in the last month are less negative about the effect of AI on society than are non-AI users, although majorities of both AI users, 60%, and non-users, 85%, say AI is a bad thing for society.
That’s quite something: believing data centers are bad, believing artificial intelligence is bad, and believing artificial intelligence is harmful for society even while using it. The latter is like a man who insists air travel is environmentally destructive yet flies regularly.
And yet, and yet, if many people and many communities don’t want data centers, they should be free to reject those centers. Better, morally and practically, to neither force communities to accept nor force to them to reject data centers through statewide or national regulations.
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- A minority view: A position held by a smaller number of people within a larger group. A person should know when he is in the majority or minority. On the issue of data centers, I’m in the minority. On so many issues beyond data centers, Whitewater’s special-interest men, for example, would do well to ponder their narrow position within the broader community. Falsely believing that one is in the majority because he collects ten like-minded people in a city of fifteen thousand is nothing more than a self-serving delusion. ↩︎
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Upcoming posts (in no decided order): Claims of Legacy, a Particular Species of Democrat, a Whitewater Comparative Analysis, Whitewater’s Workforce, ‘What Ails, What Heals’ Reviewed, and Outcome Driven Argumentation.
Best use of a monarch? — King Charles III feeds chickens:



