It seems to be accurate to point out that much of the rural United States is being transformed into "Sacrifice Zones." The term is usually associated with devastating environmental exploitation which renders a place uninhabitable -- but can also include economic development which the local population doesn't support. A definition:
A sacrifice zone or sacrifice area is a geographic area that has been
permanently changed by heavy environmental alterations (usually to a
negative degree) or economic disinvestment, often through locally unwanted land use (LULU).
Following the news of Trump's America, I find myself coming across two stories that are seldom told in the same frame, but which seem to me closely analogous. .
• All over the country, rural people a learning that some tech behemoth wants to transform or build what looks like a warehouse, but is actually an energy and water sucking data center. The locals might welcome more opportunity for economic activity, but they smell a rat. Jess Piper tells one story from rural Missouri:
... I opened my local paper, The Maryville Forum, a few days back, and saw an article
on a new AI data center that looks like it has been in the works for a
while. I am sure you know that if anyone stays on top of the news, it’s
me. If anyone regularly reads and subscribes and pays for news, it’s me.
And I didn’t know anything about a data center coming to my own county.
I
had no idea, and by the time I did have an idea, it looked as if the
“planning” part of the AI data center deal is well past the planning
stage. It looks like some developers came in and met with county
officials without making noise. It also looks like there may already
have been at least one NDA signed with the data center developers, and
that just doesn’t sit right with me. Why would anyone need to sign a
non-disclosure agreement with a developer?
... What a ripoff, and for what? The data center is only projecting
100-130 jobs, and I am not sure I believe that number. There has been no
transparency on what kind of jobs or how long they would last.
My god…I feel like we are being sold a pile of shit, and they aren’t even bothering to wrap it with a bow...
Read the whole story, told in Jess's inimitable voice.
• Meanwhile, wherever they see a likely target, ICE/DHS is scooping up rural warehouse spaces in which to lock up immigrants they want to deport, all to meet Trump and Stephen Miller's quest to Make America White Again.
Neighbors don't much like the idea of having a warehouse/concentration camp nearby. Even Republicans don't want these uses in their town. Bolt reports from Roxbury, New Jersey:
On Christmas Eve, residents of Roxbury, New Jersey, a township 50 miles west of Manhattan, learned from a Washington Post
article that the Department of Homeland Security had plans to purchase a
vacant warehouse on the outskirts of town and convert it into an ICE
detention facility. The news was part of U.S. Immigration and Customs
Enforcement’s larger plan to buy up warehouses across the country to
house 92,600 new detention beds for expediting deportations, a scheme
acting ICE director Todd Lyons likened to “[Amazon] Prime, but with
human beings.”
By mid-January, Roxbury’s Township Council, an elected body of seven people, all Republicans, passed a resolution
affirming that it “unequivocally opposes” modifying town warehouses for
ICE use. Roxbury Mayor Shawn Potillo, who forms part of the council, stated during the vote that his approval of the resolution did not mean that he opposes the country’s immigration laws.
The resolution was merely symbolic; it wouldn’t actually stop ICE
from buying the warehouse in town and turning it into a detention
center....
... The fight against the facility has brought together an unlikely
coalition of immigrant rights advocates and town leadership who have
said they support the Trump administration’s anti-immigrant agenda but
do not want to host an ICE facility. Small towns across the U.S. caught
in clashes with DHS over warehouse conversions have turned to similar arguments in a bid to stop the projects.
“The town council is unsurprisingly caught in a very difficult
position, because they are having to fight efforts from the Trump
administration, despite them being very supportive in general, of Donald
Trump and the Republicans in power,” William Angus, the co-founder of
immigrant advocacy organization Project No Ice North Jersey Alliance, or
Project NINJA, told Bolts. ...
The story goes on to explain the projected effect of turning the warehouse into a camp:
... The facility has just four toilets and is approved to supply 12,000
gallons of water each day. But increasing the capacity for 1,500 people
would require roughly 187,500 gallons each day and add more than fifteen
times the amount of sewage currently processed by the facility,
according to the lawsuit.
Despite DHS needing approval from the New
Jersey Department of Environmental Protection and the Highlands Council
to complete the project, Spinelli said that the agency has not filed
plans for changing the water system. The review of the site could happen
quickly, he explained, but there would likely be new legal challenges
to the final decision filed by the losing side that would stretch on for
years. ...
The Roxbury facility is not alone in facing challenges from neighbors. All over the country, ICE concentration camps are meeting resistance from rural people. The New York Times [gift article] reports on an array of challenges as rural communities resist the unexpected role the Trump administration has assigned to them: "Sacrifice Zone for MAGA bigotry."