The Dialectics of Data Center Mania


It’s annoying that the journalists and academics who, not long ago, were nattering on about ‘AI’ as an ethereal force, untethered from the Earth, are now talking about data centers with the fervor of new converts. Some of us have talked for years, and from the start, about the dirty, industrial nature of what’s called ‘artificial intelligence’ (and indeed, the entire tech industry).

Better late than never, I suppose.

More than one thing can be true at a time, people say; usually while trying to appear subtle. It’s a true statement but insufficient. Not only is more than one thing true at a time but many things are true, simultaneously and in relation to each other, moving through time. This is the heart of a dialectical view which can be applied to understanding the mania of data center construction, a mad dash to a landscape, dotted with ruins.


Recently, as if from nowhere (but of course, not as suddenly as it seems), data center projects have been spreading across the United States. On social media, the rough consensus is that these warehouses are evidence of a plan for mass surveillance and population control that requires hyperscale computing. This is plausible, Palantir exists, after all, but not the entire, or even main mover: it is a factor among factors moving dialectically with other elements.

It’s common for US people (who vaingloriously claim the title of ‘American’ as if the rest of the hemisphere doesn’t exist or arrived from the 12th dimension) to fret about things worth fretting about while failing to see political economy. In the case of data center mania, the circular economics and failing quest for super-profits motivating the tech industry and its camp followers (the ‘Neocloud’ firms and venture capitalists waiting for investment returns).


David Gerard recently said:


“The story of the AI bubble, is setting real dollars on fire to put imaginary valuation dollars on the books”


To set those ‘real dollars’ on fire requires having something physical to show for investors’ capital; thus, a plague of data centers. Capitalism is not rational and as Ali Kadri informs us, is based on the accumulation of waste.


Another factor to consider, from Ed Zitron:

In reality, OpenAI and Anthropic are the only meaningful companies in the AI industry. They are the majority of revenue, the majority of capacity and the majority of demand. Microsoft, Google and Amazon have exploited the desperation in a tech industry that’s run out of hypergrowth ideas, and created a near-imaginary industry by propping up both companies.

The mistake that most make in measuring the circularity of OpenAI and Anthropic is to focus entirely on the money raised — $13 billion from Microsoft and up to $50 billion from Amazon for OpenAI, and as much as $80 billion from Amazon and Google for Anthropic.

The correct analysis starts with measuring infrastructure. Based on discussions with sources and analysis of multiple years of reporting, I estimate that of the roughly $700 billion in capex spent by Google, Meta and Microsoft since 2023, at least 5.5GW of capacity costing at least $300 billion has been built entirely for two companies. This has in turn inflated sales through multiple counterparties involving NVIDIA, ODMs like Quanta, Foxconn, Supermicro and Dell, and created a form of market-driven AI psychosis that inspired Meta to burn over $158 billion in three years and the entire world to convince itself that AI was the biggest thing ever.


Zitron calls what’s occurring “AI psychosis” – an apt description (though one based on an idea of the lost sanity of an inherently insane system) for a massive build-out of infrastructure for a project that has not, and will not produce profit or useful work for the organizations in the grip of this mania.


This financial ‘psychosis’ is what the (mostly liberal) doomsayers who predict a world of perfect surveillance and control are missing. Of course, elites want this but they also want to make money and, having failed to accomplish this are doubling down in a way never before seen on this scale.


Exhibit C, a story from Tom’s Hardware:


New AI data center in Utah will generate and consume more than twice the amount of power the entire state uses — Kevin O’Leary’s 9 Gigawatt Utah data center campus approved


These stories are breathlessly reported, as if, by waving a magic wand of billionaire wish fulfillment, a gigantic data center will spring from the Earth. But there are other factors (remember, think dialectically) such as the impact of hydrocarbon supply constriction on the PCB supply chain and the lack of transformers.


The data center ‘boom’ or, more accurately, to borrow from Zitron, ‘psychosis’ is the final act in the inflation of the greatest of all bubbles, rivaling mighty Jupiter in size. Because the US is little more than a nuclear armed used car sales lot, commanded at every level by people looking for an angle, there is no one to stop this process.


It will run its course, leaving the population to pick up the pieces and scavenge for parts when the power and water run out. One can hope that at long last, as children of the not too distant future wander the ruins of data centers, lessons will have been learned.

The F-35 Maneuver

Bad ideas, like death, are inevitable and just as inescapable.

The US-based tech industry is a Pandora’s box of bad ideas, unleashed upon an unwilling and unwitting populace, and indeed world, with reckless abandon, scorching lives and the Earth itself. Never mind, they say, we’re building the future.

The latest bad idea to spread dark wings and take flight is that building a super massive data center for ‘AI’ called ‘Stargate’- a megamachine that will solve all our problems like a resource and real estate devouring Wizard of Oz – is not only good, but essential.

In an Associated Press article titled, ‘Trump highlights partnership investing $500 billion in AI‘ published Jan 23, 2025, the project is described:

WASHINGTON (AP) — President Donald Trump on Tuesday talked up a joint venture investing up to $500 billion for infrastructure tied to artificial intelligence by a new partnership formed by OpenAI, Oracle and SoftBank.

The new entity, Stargate, will start building out data centers and the electricity generation needed for the further development of the fast-evolving AI in Texas, according to the White House. The initial investment is expected to be $100 billion and could reach five times that sum.

“It’s big money and high quality people,” said Trump, adding that it’s “a resounding declaration of confidence in America’s potential” under his new administration.

[…]

It seems like only yesterday, or more precisely, several months ago, that the same ‘Stargate’, with a still astronomically large but comparatively smaller budget, was described in a Tom’s Hardware article of March 24, 2024 titled ‘OpenAI and Microsoft reportedly planning $100 billion datacenter project for an AI supercomputer‘ –

Microsoft and OpenAI are reportedly working on a massive datacenter to house an AI-focused supercomputer featuring millions of GPUs. The Information reports that the project could cost “in excess of $115 billion” and that the supercomputer, currently dubbed “Stargate” inside OpenAI, would be U.S.-based. 

The report says that Microsoft would foot the bill for the datacenter, which could be “100 times more costly” than some of the biggest operating centers today. Stargate would be the largest in a string of datacenter projects the two companies hope to build in the next six years, and executives hope to have it running by 2028.

[…]

Bad ideas are inevitable but also, apparently, subject to cost overruns.

There are many ways to think and talk about this project, which is certain to fail (and there is news of far less costly methods, making the Olympian spending even more obviously suspicious). For me, the clearest way to understand the Stargate project and in fact, the entire ‘AI’ land grab, is as an attempt to create guaranteed profit for those tech firms who’re at the commanding heights – Microsoft, OpenAI, Amazon, Oracle and co-conspirators. Capital will flow into these firms whether the system works as advertised or not – i.e. they are paid for both function (such as it is) and malfunction.

This isn’t a new technique. The US defense industry has a long history of stuffing its coffers with cash for delivering weapons systems that work… sometimes. The most infamous example is Lockheed’s F-35 fighter, a project that provides the company with funding for both delivery and correction as described in the US Government Accounting Office article, ‘F-35 Joint Strike Fighter: More Actions Needed to Explain Cost Growth and Support Engine Modernization Decision’ May 2023 –

The Department of Defense’s most expensive weapon system—the F-35 aircraft—is now more than a decade behind schedule and $183 billion over original cost estimates.

[…]

That’s a decade and 183 billion of sweet, steady profit, the sort of profit the tech industry has long sought. First there was ‘enterprise software’, then there was subscription-based cloud, both efforts to create ‘growth’ and dependable cash infusions. Now, with Stargate, the industry may have, at last, found its F-35. Unlike the troubled fighter plane, there won’t be any Tom Cruise films featuring the data center. Then again, perhaps there will be. Netflix, like the rest of the industry, is out of ideas.