Want to join in? Respond to our weekly writing prompts, open to everyone.
Want to join in? Respond to our weekly writing prompts, open to everyone.
from
Platser

Edinburgh, Skottlands majestätiska huvudstad, är en stad som andas historia och charm. Belägen på östra kusten, med sin dramatiska siluett av slott, medeltida gränder och vulkaniska kullar, är staden en perfekt blandning av gammalt och nytt. Här kan du vandra genom tusen år av historia, njuta av världsklasskultur, och samtidigt uppleva en modern, levande stad med en unik karaktär.
Edinburghs mest ikoniska landmärke är utan tvekan Edinburgh Castle, som reser sig stoltsamt på Castle Rock. Slottet, som har fungerat som kungligt residens, militärfästning och fängelse, är en symbol för Skottlands turbulenta historia. Här kan du se de skotska kronjuvelerna, Stone of Destiny, och den berömda kanonen Mons Meg. Utanför slottet ligger Royal Mile, en livlig gata som sträcker sig ner till Holyrood Palace, kungafamiljens officiella residens i Skottland. Längs Royal Mile hittar du historiska byggnader, museer, traditionella pubar och affärer som säljer allt från tartanplädar till whisky.
Ett annat måste är Holyrood Abbey, en vacker ruin som ligger intill Holyrood Palace. Abbotet grundades på 1100-talet och är en påminnelse om stadens religiösa och kungliga förflutna. För den som är intresserad av arkitektur är St Giles' Cathedral ett besök värt. Katedralen, med sin imponerande gotiska stil och färgstarka fönster, är en av Skottlands mest kända kyrkor.
Edinburgh är också känt som en av världens ledande kulturstäder. Varje år i augusti omvandlas staden till en scen för Edinburgh Festival Fringe, världens största konst- och kulturfestival. Under festivalen fylls gatorna av artister, komiker, musiker och teatergrupper från hela världen. Det är en tid då staden verkligen lever upp till sitt rykte som en plats för kreativitet och innovation.
För litteraturälskare är Writers' Museum ett besök värt. Museet hyllar tre av Skottlands största författare: Robert Burns, Walter Scott och Robert Louis Stevenson. Här kan du lära dig mer om deras liv och verk, och se originalmanuskript och personliga föremål.
Om du är intresserad av vetenskap och innovation, bör du besöka National Museum of Scotland. Museet erbjuder en fascinerande resa genom tid och rum, från dinosaurier och forntida skatter till modern teknik och design. Det är ett perfekt ställe för både barn och vuxna.
Edinburgh är inte bara en stad för historiker och kulturälskare – den erbjuder också fantastiska naturupplevelser. Arthur's Seat, en utdöd vulkan, är stadens högsta punkt och erbjuder en magnifik utsikt över hela området. En vandring upp för berget är ett måste för den som vill uppleva stadens skönhet från ovan. Om du föredrar en lugnare promenad, är Princes Street Gardens en perfekt plats att slappna av på. Parken ligger mitt i staden och erbjuder en grön oas med vackra blommor, fontäner och utsikt över Edinburgh Castle.
För den som vill utforska utanför stadskärnan, är Leith ett trevligt område att besöka. Detta hamnområde har genomgått en förvandling och är nu känt för sina trendiga restauranger, barer och konstgallerier. Här kan du också besöka Royal Yacht Britannia, drottning Elizabeth II:s tidigare kungliga yacht, som nu är ett museum.
Edinburgh har ett rikt utbud av restauranger, från traditionella skotska pubar till moderna fine dining-restauranger. Ett måste är att prova haggis, Skottlands nationalrätt, som serveras med “neeps and tatties” (rotfrukter och potatis). För den som är modig kan man också prova whisky – Skottland är ju känt för sin whisky, och Edinburgh har flera destillerier och whiskybars där du kan lära dig mer om tillverkningsprocessen och smaka på olika sorter.
Om du föredrar något sött, bör du prova en shortbread eller en Cranachan, en traditionell skotsk dessert gjord på havregryn, hallon, grädde och whisky.
Edinburgh är en kompakt stad, och det mesta kan nås till fots. För längre sträckor finns det ett välutbyggt kollektivtrafiksystem med bussar och spårvagnar. Staden har också en internationell flygplats, vilket gör den lättillgänglig för resenärer från hela världen.
När det gäller boende finns det något för alla smaker och budgetar. Från lyxiga hotell på Princes Street till mysiga bed and breakfasts i Gamla stan, eller moderna hostels för backpackers – Edinburgh har allt.
Somalia’s hunger is not a breaking story. It is a baseline.
Every few years, the photos and headlines return: emaciated children, dry riverbeds, queues for food distributions. Donors convene pledging conferences, agencies refresh their emergency plans, politicians promise coordination. Then the rains come, or the news cycle moves on, and the crisis is reclassified from “famine” to “acute food insecurity.” But for millions of Somalis, hunger never fully leaves. It stretches and tightens with the seasons and the political calendar, becoming a normal condition to be managed rather than an intolerable failure to be ended.
Calling this “normal” is not a moral judgment on Somalis; it is a description of how the system currently works. Droughts, floods, displacement and high prices interact with fragile institutions, insecure roads, missing infrastructure, and a relief economy that keeps people just above the survival line without changing the underlying structure. Politics, meanwhile, continues as always: competition over territory and rents, short-term bargains, and symbolic announcements about resilience that rarely translate into the boring, patient investments that would make chronic hunger exceptional again.
To understand why hunger behaves like a norm in Somalia, it helps to separate three layers: climate, infrastructure and markets; and politics.
The climate layer is the one most often named: multi-season droughts, erratic rains, rising temperatures, and then destructive floods. For rural and pastoral households, this means more frequent and sharper shocks to pasture, water and livestock. Climate is not new in Somalia, but the speed and volatility of current patterns mean less time to recover between shocks. Even in good years, many households are one failed season away from crisis; in bad years, the line between “poor” and “famine-affected” is thin.
Infrastructure and markets translate these shocks into hunger or resilience. In large parts of Somalia, there are few reliable rural roads, limited cold storage and warehouses, weak irrigation, and patchy electricity. When a drought hits, traders can only move food and water so fast and so far; when prices spike globally, import-dependent markets pass that cost straight to consumers. Water trucking, private boreholes and small-scale irrigation schemes play a vital role, but they are fragile and expensive. There is no dense, climate-ready “infrastructure of adaptation” – no network of wells, storage, small dams, feeder roads, energy and communications robust enough to absorb shocks and keep food and water physically accessible.
In this vacuum, markets do function, but they do so under extreme stress and with high margins. A trader in a remote district is not a villain for charging more when fuel prices and security risks climb. Yet for households spending most of their income on food, these price shifts are the difference between eating twice a day and once, between staying in place or joining an IDP camp. Mobile money and remittances soften the blow for some families, but they are unevenly distributed and cannot substitute for missing public systems.
Over this sits the political layer. “Politics as always” in this context means that hunger is deeply shaped by decisions on security, representation, and resource allocation, but rarely treated as the central test of those decisions. Territorial control and clan bargaining shape where roads are built, where health posts and schools survive, where local government functions; they also influence how quickly humanitarian aid reaches certain areas, which communities are visible in national plans, and whose suffering becomes legible to donors. In some places, negotiations with armed actors determine whether food can move at all. In others, the presence of an international compound guarantees attention to nearby camps, while villages just beyond the security perimeter remain invisible.
Humanitarian actors, for their part, are caught between genuine commitment and structural constraints. Funding is short-term and volatile; appeals are chronically under-financed; programmes are often designed for one- or two-year cycles. “Resilience” has become a standard word in project documents, but much of the architecture still revolves around emergency response. When drought looms, plans are activated, NGOs scale up, and cash or food is distributed. When the immediate emergency fades, budgets shrink, teams are reassigned, and the opportunity to systematically build water, storage, roads and safety nets is lost again. No single agency chooses this pattern, but together they reproduce a system where survival is the outcome, not transformation.
The result is a grim equilibrium. Rural and peri-urban households adapt as best they can, diversifying income, migrating, sending children to cities, relying on relatives abroad. Local markets and private providers fill gaps with water, transport, and basic services where possible. Humanitarian pipelines prevent full-scale famine in many areas, especially when early warning works and funding arrives on time. Politicians manage the optics, balancing domestic expectations and donor relationships. Hunger moves up and down the scale, but it rarely drops out of the picture.
This is what “hunger as norm” looks like: a country where food insecurity is not an exceptional shock but an ordinary risk, managed each year through a mix of coping strategies, emergency aid, and selective infrastructure fixes. Climate change tightens this equilibrium; each cycle becomes harder to manage without deeper structural change. Yet the politics of the state, the incentives of donors, and the business models of many actors remain aligned with continuity rather than disruption.
Breaking this norm does not start with a new slogan, but with a different way of asking questions. Instead of “How many people can we feed this season?”, the core questions become: which investments in water, roads, storage, energy and basic services would permanently reduce the population living one shock away from hunger? How can social protection systems be built to deliver predictable support before people exhaust their assets? What forms of local government and accountability are needed so that drought response is a matter of public policy, not ad hoc negotiation? And how should external actors change their own funding and programming logic to support that shift, rather than reproducing the emergency cycle?
Politics will not disappear from these choices; it will always shape who benefits first, which regions and clans see more investment, and how institutions are built or blocked. But politics can operate inside a fundamentally different structure – one in which the baseline is that most Somalis are food secure most of the time, and hunger has returned to what it should be: a signal of exceptional failure, not an expected part of life.
For now, that is not the system Somalia has. The system Somalia has is one where climate shocks are intensifying, infrastructure for adaptation is thin, markets are stressed, and the relief economy sits on top of a fragile political order. As long as those fundamentals remain unchanged, hunger will continue to behave like a norm, and politics will continue as always.
The question for Somali policymakers, practitioners, and their partners is whether they are prepared to treat this as unacceptable normality and reorganise their work accordingly – or whether the next drought and the next set of photos will once again be absorbed into a familiar, lethal routine.
from targetedjaidee
Healing Out Loud.
That is what I am doing. Ya know, sometimes I get angry & very upset with how things have transpired. But at the same time: I am grateful I can feel these types of emotions & let them go after.
Today's verse is as follows:
Psalms 91 NIV 1Whoever dwells in the shelter of the Most High will rest in the shadow of the Almighty. 2 I will say of the Lord, “He is my refuge and my fortress, my God, in whom I trust.”
Imagine that! I am firmly protected & blessed by the Most High. He is my dwelling place, and He is the reason I am alive today. I am beyond grateful this morning, guys.
I really hope you have a blessed day!
Jaide owwt*
from
Atmósferas
Esta sombra, que es mi sombra, no tiene ojos pero sé que mira, no tiene boca pero sé que calla. No tiene rabo pero sé que es mono. Esta es la sombra del animal.
Esta sombra es lo que pienso cuando no hay testigos y lo que oculto cuando parezco claro. Esta sombra es memoria y desmemoria, caprichosa e indolente.
Esta sombra tiene corazón de piedra, enajenada sombra de mis días.
Aparece y desaparece, capaz de mezclarse entre las sombras, conspirar, retorcer, fagocitar.
Sé que es ella y tú también. Es mi sombra, es tu sombra, la raíz, las sombras, nuestras sombras, nuestra única gran sombra que clama por más sombra.
from An Open Letter
Today I went to the gym and worked from home, and not really any friends were online today. And so I felt lonely. Completely honest, I haven’t felt that way in a long long time. I’m so used to having E there, and I would virtually never have to actually deal with loneliness. I forgot how miserable of a feeling it is. I know that this is just a one day thing, but that feeling of isolation is miserable. I really wanted to almost reach out to her again, partially because some of me feels like she’s also lonely. But that’s probably not the case, and regardless it doesn’t help me at all to think about that. I think I ultimately just need to recognize this feeling, and then let it pass. I do remember however how enticing it is to have a partner that you codependent with. Never having to worry about loneliness is a nice thought. Never having to be alone again. Except that’s not how it works, and it’s almost like saying how alcohol is nice because you never have to feel bad again. I will just make more friends, and it will be OK. And regardless it’s just one day. There are so many other things that I want to do like playing songs on the guitar, creative projects, etc. Oh yeah and reading, I really wanna try reading during the day at some point.
from
Talk to Fa

The more I tap in, the more excessive words feel.
from Two Sentences
Took the time to catch up on sleep. Did a 7 mile long run after, then kept experimenting with Gastown.
from
Talk to Fa

I am a hopeful romantic. Everything is possible. I really believe that.
from 下川友
今日は、なんだか自分の中のいろんな面が顔を出した一日だった。 今日も僕は、あらゆる面において一人だった。 家族も友達もちゃんといるけれど、それでも一人だなあといつも思っている。
朝、顔に日焼け止めを塗っていたとき、ふと「左右で色が違ったらどうなるんだろう」と思って、右半分だけ塗ってみた。鏡の中の自分が、ちょっとした実験動物みたいで、思わず笑ってしまった。
そのままの顔で陶芸教室へ。 今日は最初から「誰とも話さないって決めたんだ」って、隣に座ったおじさんに宣言してみた。普段はよく喋るから、たまにはこういう日があってもいいかなって思って。 でも結局、土をこねながら「この粘土、ちょっと乾いてません?」って話しかけてしまった。おじさん、少し笑ってた。
帰り道、団地のエレベーターに乗るとき、誰もいないのに「今、団地がアツいんだよね」ってつぶやいてみた。誰に向けて言ったのか、自分でもよくわからないけど、なんだか気分がよかった。
午後は、チラシが風に乗って飛んできそうな時間を見計らって、玄関前にイスを出して待ってみた。案の定、ふわっと一枚、舞ってきた。手に取ってみたら、地域の陶芸展の案内だった。今日の自分にぴったりすぎて、また笑ってしまった。
夕方、公園に行って、グローブを二つ持ってベンチに座った。 学校帰りの子どもが通りかかったから、目で「どう?」って誘ってみたけど、スルーされた。まあ、そんな日もある。
夜は、録画してあった紅白を持ち寄って、友人たちと鑑賞会。 「このシーン、巻き戻していい?」って、誰よりも早くリモコンを握ってた。 みんな笑ってたけど、ちゃんと巻き戻させてくれた。
ふとした拍子に、昔の友だちの名前をインターネットで検索してみた。 何かを知りたいわけじゃない。ただ、今もどこかで元気にしてるといいなって思っただけ。
そういえば、アロハシャツをタンスの奥に隠してたんだった。 「いつか着る日」を、自分でも忘れるようにして。 でも、今日みたいな日は、ちょっとだけ思い出してもいいかもしれない。
学校の授業中、退屈で机に突っ伏して寝ていたら、隣の女子に話しかけられた。 「君って、寝てるときも髪が整ってるんだね」って。 そうなのか。僕は、寝てるときも髪型がキマっているんだ。
机の引き出しから、昔もらったパンフレットを引っ張り出して、赤ペンで線を引いた所を確認する。 昔の自分はこんな所に線を引いていたのかと、昔と今の距離を測る。
僕にとっての一日の終わりは、夜寝る時じゃない。 一日の終わりが、放課後なのが、この僕である。
from Mitchell Report
⚠️ Warning: Political Rant
Okay, this is one of the few politically related posts I make each year because politics are so divisive. So here’s your warning: if you’d rather not read political commentary, feel free to stop here.
The recent armed action against Iran has me conflicted. I believe it's more of a distraction and a pretext than a genuine strategic necessity. While the issues we face in America come from the neglect of both parties, Trump seems to be using these problems to his advantage. This situation should have been addressed years ago when Iran first began developing its nuclear program. The United States is skilled at acting as a global police force and solving immediate problems but not at handling long-term challenges such as nation building. We have never successfully created a functioning foreign democracy.
Historically, outside powers that try to build nations in their own image often fail in the long run. They either cannot fully erase local culture, or they create deep resentment in the process. The British Empire tried to project its institutions and values onto places like India and large parts of the Middle East, disrupting older political and cultural systems. When the British Empire withdrew, it left behind borders and governments that did not always match local realities, which helped fuel instability that continues today. There are certainly aspects of our own Constitution that could be improved, and Trump has exploited some of its weaknesses.
While I don't completely disagree with action against Iran, it should have happened years ago, just like with Cuba. The situation in Cuba also should have been resolved long ago. I believe the United States should help guide Cuba until it becomes a stable modern democracy, intervening firmly if it begins to stray.
What concerns me most now are the costs in lives, money, and timing. I fear this situation might serve as a pretext to interfere with the upcoming elections or to distract from other issues such as the release of the Epstein files and broader corruption. If this administration were honest, I might believe the urgency. But after so much misdirection, self-dealing, and falsehoods, I can't give this president the benefit of the doubt anymore. That ended with January 6th.
On top of that, he hasn't delivered on most of his campaign promises. My bills keep rising, and while a few prices have gone down, those savings are offset elsewhere. Every time it seems the economy might recover, he makes comments that hurt it further. Tariffs are taxes, and the public ultimately pays them. If any other president behaved this way, there would be outrage in Congress. Yet for some reason, this one is treated differently from any president I've seen in my lifetime.
I only hope Congress learns from this experience. And I don't want to hear any Republican complain if a future Democratic president takes similar actions. Our political system has several deep problems. One of the largest is the lack of adequate representation. I've said it for years: 435 Representatives and 100 Senators for over 330 million people isn't right. We should have at least one representative for every 50,000 citizens.
We also need new constitutional amendments; term limits, stronger limits on presidential power, and real consequences for any president who forgets that they are a steward of the people, not a monarch. Congress itself must also move away from party dominance. Partisan politics are destroying this country. I'm glad I left both parties and now consider myself a proud independent.
End of rant.
#opinion #politics
from Dallineation
Occasionally I listen to a podcast called “The God Minute”. These are daily prayer and meditation programs that last 10-15 minutes. They are a wonderful way to help me focus on God and on sacred things. And they often feature wonderfully curated, beautiful music that draws your thoughts heavenward. One of the songs from today's podcast caught my attention.
The song is called “On the Nature of Daylight” and is performed by VOCES8 on their album “Nightfall” released in 2024. VOCES8 is an a capella octet from England and their music is, in a word, divine.
I decided to listen to the entire album today while I worked. And then I listened to two more of their albums!
But the song that brought me to tears is from that same album “Nightfall” and is called “Even When He Is Silent” by Kim André Arnesen.
Here are the lyrics:
I believe in the sun, even when it's not shining I believe in love, even when I feel it not I believe in God, even when He is silent
Here is the recording by VOCES8:
And here is a beautiful performance of the piece by St. Olaf Choir:
This song was a desperately needed lifeline for me – a timely gift from a loving God. It resonated with me on a deeply personal level and expresses my current spiritual, mental, and emotional state better than words ever could.
The description of the St. Olaf Choir video says the text of the lyrics was found in a concentration camp after World War II. I wanted to know more about that, and a web search revealed many different stories and explanations for the text's origin. But I found a blog post that seems well-researched and says the original text – somewhat different from the lyrics of the song – was likely found in Cologne, scratched on the wall of an underground passageway that likely served as a refuge from the Gestapo.
I believe in the sun, though it be dark; I believe in God, though He be silent; I believe in neighborly love, though it be unable to reveal itself.
Whatever the circumstances or origins, the words and music are profound and moving. And exactly what I needed today.
I daresay it's also what the world needs today.
#100DaysToOffload (No. 143) #faith #Lent #Christianity #music
from As.No.One
Who am I to write during the times that we face today? Honestly, I am no one. That's right. Officially, No One. I am whispered about, blamed when there's nothing else to blame, put on the spot, invisible yet always seen. Just like you, I am me. No one.
Recently, my thoughts have been loud and nowhere to voice it. Hopefully today, my words can at least be seen for no one in particular but really just for me. I genuinely hope that these words today can reach out, from wherever one may read this. I want thought and passion. I wish for the days again where words meant something. Where words didn't get muddy with propaganda. Or words that could touch the very soul that belongs to someone. My dream is for my words today to reach someone, anyone, maybe no one.
As I write to myself, I must ask myself, the very question that I think we all face as no one. What am I to do today?
Do I have answer? Does anyone?
Probably like most, I woke up today in my bed in a room that had electricity. My clock sitting on my bedside table gave me the measure for what I was hoping to do this day. Laundry. Dishes. Maybe go for a walk. Sadly, none of those things happened. Instead, I found myself pondering about the news and only found myself more sad. The news of death does not come as a shock anymore. The fight between many people all over is numbing to hear. A crime that was committed for many years by many people with no repercussions. And with no one caring about anyone except for their own.
I am no different. I have already established that I am no one.
These past many years, we have all been through it. From being locked inside in fear of disease that some would say was a common cold, to being on the brink of civil war, to also being at the brink of World War 3. And I can tell you now, I miss my childhood. This time is not for the weak. This time is for the resilient. It is a time for no one.
I can keep going to work every day, as my coworkers and I discuss all the events that go on outside of our bubble, but no one really cares. I say, “How are you,” as if I already don't know. Most likely the same answer will be given. “I'm good.” No one is good. No one is happy. Everyone is sad. As someone once said, “He has only time to be a machine.” Is that all one can be? To live day in day out, with expectations from peers, family, elders, and corporations to just do what they want you to do. There are hardly times that I can afford to give myself pleasantries. And when I do have time, I must fill it with the urge to get all my chores done so I do not lose my place as no one and be lower than no one. And we all have seen what becomes of someone who is lower than no one. Holding up a carboard sign at a corner of a street, with clothes that don't fit and matted hair, and resorting to the few things that could hopefully take the mind off of the shame of what was lost.
No one is a machine. With each minute that passes by, we are like clockwork. Traffic starting at 7:30 in the morning, while we all rush to go to our jobs that pays us every two weeks, only to be in that same traffic around 5 o'clock in the evening just to come home and do it all over the next day. Most of us eat around noon while we sit with our coworkers, we see every day and talk about the mundane things. How's the significant other? How are the kids? Are you still in search for a house on the market? Did you hear what happened yesterday? And yet no one fully grasps the potential that we could reach. Just like machines, we function as we have been programmed. To work and be led by what is outside our bubbles, when really no one cares about what is in our bubble.
From a young age, this has been our program. We go to school most starting around 8 in the morning. Each child sitting at a desk listening to what is being taught, some getting punished for asking questions outside of the norm, and we would sit there until noon to eat and play with our friends, just to then go back to that desk. A bell dismissed us around 3 in the afternoon, just for us to go home and do the nagging task of homework. Just to do it for the next twelve years of our lives. And some will take it further for another four to ten years to specialize in something just to get a small jump in that field of work. Do you see the similarity?
This might be just a thought; can we reach out and pop that bubble? Is no one ready to step away from what has been or is everyone afraid? Has anyone proven that we are resilient? Are we still no one?
I am not asking for revolution but if someone is out there who wants to start it, I say no one needs it. No one can win with war. Though they say there are victors. But what did those victors have to do to survive? What I am asking has already been asked.
What am I to do today?
There is so much that we cannot see even when it is right in front of us. And if we are afraid, then let's be strong together. Be resilient. I ask no one to be more than the mundane. That's the goal for today. Be more than a machine. To be more than what no one has been programmed to be.
from
SmarterArticles

In December 2025, Governor Spencer Cox stood before an audience of government officials, business leaders, and academics at the Utah AI Summit in Salt Lake City and announced a vision he called “pro-human AI.” The initiative would spread across six areas: workforce development, industry, state government, academia, public policy, and learning. It would invest $10 million in AI-ready workforce curriculum. It would position Utah as a national model for responsible artificial intelligence governance. And it would do all of this while the state simultaneously prepared to host some of the largest data centre campuses on the planet, facilities whose combined energy demands could consume four times the electricity that Utah residents and businesses currently use.
The tension between these two commitments is not incidental. It is structural. Utah has become, perhaps more than any other state, a laboratory for testing whether a government can credibly regulate the harms of artificial intelligence while aggressively courting the industry that produces them. Governor Cox has articulated this duality with a clarity unusual in American politics: “Let's use this technology to benefit humankind, and let's regulate it to make sure they don't destroy humankind. I don't think that's a contradiction. I think that's common sense.” The question is whether common sense can survive contact with the economic incentives now converging on a stretch of desert southeast of Delta, Utah, where a 20-million-square-foot data centre campus is already under construction.
Utah's regulatory framework for artificial intelligence is, by design, the lightest in the nation. The Artificial Intelligence Policy Act, Senate Bill 149, signed into law on 13 March 2024 and effective from 1 May that year, created the country's first Office of Artificial Intelligence Policy and established what the state calls a “learning laboratory” for AI innovation. Businesses can apply to test AI systems under state supervision, receiving temporary regulatory mitigation in exchange for consumer safeguards and transparency commitments. If a product deceives a customer or causes harm during the testing period, the developer works with regulators toward a reduced penalty. The idea, borrowed from Utah's earlier financial technology sandbox programme launched in 2019, is to encourage small AI developers to innovate without paralysing fear of enforcement.
The Act's substantive requirements are modest. Certain licensed professions, including mental health providers, must disclose upfront when a person is interacting with AI. Other professions, including telemarketing, must disclose AI usage only if asked. Violations carry an administrative fine of up to $2,500 and a civil penalty of up to $5,000. Compared to Colorado's SB24-205, which includes algorithmic discrimination prohibitions, impact assessment mandates, and risk management requirements, Utah's approach is deliberately permissive. As the IAPP noted upon the bill's passage, Utah brought generative AI into the consumer protection realm while stopping well short of imposing the kind of obligations that might deter investment.
Subsequent legislation has added layers without fundamentally altering the architecture. In March 2025, Governor Cox signed SB 271, the Unauthorized AI Impersonation Act, extending existing identity abuse laws to cover commercial deepfake usage. A separate bill barred mental health chatbots from selling Utahns' personal health data or using it to target users with advertisements. The 2025 legislative session also extended the Act's expiration date by two years, to July 2027, while SB 226 narrowed disclosure requirements so that they apply only when a consumer directly asks or during “high-risk” interactions. Each adjustment further refined the core philosophy: regulate the use of AI where it touches vulnerable populations, but leave the development of AI technology essentially untouched.
This philosophy is one Governor Cox has articulated explicitly. “The government should not be regulating the development of AI,” he told the AI Summit audience, “but the minute you decide to use those tools to give my kid a sexualised chatbot, then it's my business, and it's the government's business.” It is a line that draws an appealingly clean distinction between creation and deployment, between the forge and the marketplace. It is also a distinction that becomes harder to maintain when the state's economic strategy depends on making Utah the forge itself.
At the One Utah Summit in October 2024, Governor Cox unveiled Operation Gigawatt, an initiative to double the state's power production within a decade by adding four gigawatts of capacity. The plan targets nuclear and geothermal energy as its centrepieces, alongside an “all of the above” approach that nominally includes solar and wind, though those resources have faded from the practical conversation. Cox has framed the initiative in the language of geopolitical competition, warning of a new global “arms race” over who will ultimately control artificial intelligence technologies and the energy they need. The motivation is straightforward: data centres need power, and Utah's main electricity provider, Rocky Mountain Power, does not have nearly enough.
The scale of what is being built is staggering. Creekstone Energy is developing the Delta Gigasite in Millard County, a 20-million-square-foot campus that would be the world's largest data centre complex, eclipsing the current record holder in Inner Mongolia. The company plans to manage 10 gigawatts of capacity at the site, drawing from a mix of solar, natural gas, and power from the Intermountain Power Project, with nuclear under active evaluation. In December 2025, Creekstone signed a memorandum of understanding with Salt Lake City-headquartered EnergySolutions to study the integration of at least two gigawatts of next-generation nuclear power, with a target for commercial operation between 2030 and 2035. Creekstone's CEO, Ray Conley, described nuclear as having “the potential to complement our multisource approach and support the growth of large-scale AI and digital-infrastructure development.”
Less than a mile away, Joule Capital Partners is building a 4,000-acre, four-gigawatt data centre campus focused on AI workloads, set to begin operations in 2026. Initial plans call for six buildings, each powered by 69 Caterpillar natural gas generators. The battery storage system is permitted to accept cleaner electricity sources, including fuel cells and a nearby geothermal project under construction by Fervo Energy, as well as small modular nuclear reactors should they become commercially available. But for the foreseeable future, the power will come from burning natural gas.
In Eagle Mountain, Meta's data campus is expanding, a large QTS data hub is under construction, and Google is waiting to build on 300 acres it owns within city limits. Google has already delayed its Eagle Mountain build due to energy constraints, prompting the city council to explore constructing small nuclear reactors. In Brigham City, a $750 million partnership between Hi Tech Solutions and Holtec International, announced in November 2025, aims to create what Cox described as “a complete civil nuclear energy ecosystem from start to finish.” The plan envisions up to ten Holtec SMR-300 small modular reactors for civilian and military use, a manufacturing hub, and a workforce training centre developed with Utah's universities and technical colleges. The first reactor is not expected to come online until the early 2030s.
A February 2026 investigation by The Salt Lake Tribune, published in partnership with Grist, reported that data centres planned for Utah could consume as much as four times the electricity the state currently uses. Industry analysts expected both the quantity of data centres and the amount of power they consume to quadruple over the next four years. Joule's applications filed with the state indicate an initial output of one gigawatt, roughly a quarter of Utah's current annual electricity consumption, but public statements suggest the eventual target exceeds four gigawatts.
The environmental costs are not limited to carbon emissions. Water, in a state engulfed in a decades-long drought, is an equally pressing concern. The Salt Lake Tribune found that the NSA data centre in Bluffdale consumed more than 126 million gallons between October 2024 and September 2025, enough to meet the annual indoor needs of nearly 800 Utah households. Until recently, data centres in the state were not required to report their water use. State Representative Jill Koford, a Republican, introduced legislation in 2026 to require aggregated water use reporting, acknowledging that “we really don't have any statewide guardrails for reporting and transparency.” This is the same state whose governor stood on the shores of the drying Great Salt Lake in late 2025 pledging to help refill it in time for the 2034 Winter Olympics.
This is the economic engine that “pro-human AI” regulation must coexist with. In March 2025, the Utah Legislature passed SB 132, allowing private companies with energy demands of 100 megawatts or more to build their own generating stations that operate off the public grid. The bill's sponsor, Senator Scott Sandall, specifically cited data centres as the impetus. The legislation was designed to prevent the costs of massive new energy infrastructure from being passed to existing ratepayers, but it simultaneously codified the principle that data centre operators can bypass the regulated utility system entirely, generating their own power on their own terms.
The centrepiece of Governor Cox's moral argument for state-level AI regulation is child safety. His rhetoric on this subject is forceful and specific. “It's one thing if we're fighting China and you're developing your model,” he said at the 2026 Politico Governors Summit in Washington, D.C. “But once you start selling sexualised chatbots to kids in my state, now I have a problem with that, and I'm going to get involved there, and the Supreme Court is going to back me up on that.”
Utah has indeed been among the most aggressive states in the nation at addressing algorithmic harms to children. In 2024, the legislature passed two significant bills. HB 464 created a private right of action for minors who suffer adverse mental health outcomes arising from excessive use of algorithmically curated social media services, with a rebuttable presumption that the platform's algorithms caused the harm. Damages start at $10,000. SB 194, the Utah Minor Protection in Social Media Act, required social media platforms to implement age verification, embedded parental controls, and default privacy settings for minor accounts, including mandatory parent-scheduled social media breaks, daily usage time limits, prohibition of autoplay functions, and a blackout window from 10:30 p.m. to 6:30 a.m.
These were not tentative measures. They represented a genuine attempt to hold social media companies accountable for design choices that optimise engagement at the expense of adolescent wellbeing. The legislative intent drew directly on years of research and disclosure. In 2021, Frances Haugen, a former Facebook employee, disclosed thousands of internal documents confirming that Meta was aware of Instagram's negative impact on teen mental health. Facebook's own internal research found that 13.5 per cent of teen girls said Instagram worsened suicidal thoughts, and 32 per cent reported that when they felt bad about their bodies, Instagram made them feel worse. A second whistleblower, Arturo Bejar, testified before Congress in 2023 that Meta's top executives, including CEO Mark Zuckerberg, had ignored internal warnings for years. The business incentive driving these design choices is substantial: research has estimated that social media platforms generate nearly $11 billion annually in advertising revenue from users aged 0 to 17, creating a powerful structural motivation to keep minors engaged regardless of the consequences.
The problem is that the courts have not been kind to Utah's ambitions. On 10 September 2024, U.S. District Court Judge Robert Shelby issued a 39-page ruling granting a preliminary injunction against SB 194, blocking the law from taking effect. NetChoice, a trade association representing Google, Meta, Snap, and X, had argued the law violated the First and Fourteenth Amendments. Judge Shelby agreed that NetChoice was “substantially likely to succeed on its claim that the Act violates the First Amendment,” finding that the law imposed content-based restrictions and was not narrowly tailored to achieve the state's goals. He also noted that Utah had “not provided evidence establishing a clear, causal relationship between minors' social media use and negative mental health impacts.” The state appealed; a three-judge panel of the Tenth Circuit heard arguments in November 2025, with the outcome still pending.
The ruling illustrated a fundamental asymmetry. States can pass laws condemning algorithmic harms. Courts can block those laws as unconstitutional. And the companies whose business models depend on maximising adolescent engagement continue operating largely unchanged. The same companies that Utah's child safety legislation targets are, in many cases, the same companies whose data centre operations Utah is working to attract.
The conflict between state-level child protection and federal deregulatory pressure reached its sharpest point in February 2026. Representative Doug Fiefia, a Utah Republican, introduced HB 286, the Artificial Intelligence Transparency Act, which would require frontier AI companies to publish safety and child protection plans, produce risk assessments for original AI models, report safety incidents to the state's Office of AI Policy, and face civil penalties of $1 million for a first violation and $3 million for subsequent violations. The bill also included whistleblower protections for employees who report safety concerns.
The White House responded with remarkable force. On 12 February 2026, the White House Office of Intergovernmental Affairs sent a letter to Republican Utah Senate Majority Leader Kirk Cullimore Jr. declaring itself “categorically opposed to Utah HB 286” and calling it “an unfixable bill that goes against the Administration's AI Agenda.” White House officials had spent two weeks urging Fiefia not to move the bill forward and, according to reporting by Axios, did not offer specific changes that could make it acceptable. A source told Axios that the White House official indicated “there's nothing Fiefia can do to make him happy.”
The intervention was extraordinary. A Republican administration was pressuring a Republican-controlled state legislature to abandon a transparency bill with overwhelming bipartisan public support. A January 2026 poll by Public Opinion Strategies found that more than 90 per cent of Utah voters supported every component of HB 286, with approximately 80 per cent signalling strong support. Seventy-eight per cent wanted lawmakers to prioritise AI safety bills. Seventy-one per cent worried the state would not regulate AI enough. And 61 per cent opposed President Trump's executive order blocking state AI legislation.
National polling told a similar story. The Institute for Family Studies surveyed 6,200 voters and found that 90 per cent chose child safety over preventing states from passing AI regulations that could burden tech companies. This included 89 per cent of Trump voters and 95 per cent of Harris voters.
The resolution has been a familiar one in American politics: the ambitious bill was set aside, and a more modest alternative advanced. House Speaker Mike Schultz pointed to Fiefia's other bill, HB 438, the Companion Chatbot Safety Act, as “the bill we're going to move forward with for sure.” HB 438 requires AI chatbots to obtain consent before sharing user data, clearly disclose advertisements, and treat minors with special care. Companion chatbots designed to simulate intimate relationships must notify young users every hour that they should take a break, that the chatbot is not a real human, and that companion chatbots may be unhealthy. It is a useful bill. It is also a substantially less threatening one. Not everyone views the retreat as a compromise; the Libertas Institute, a Utah-based libertarian think tank, argued that HB 286 represented “government overreach in AI development,” contending that broad paperwork mandates and significant penalties would burden developers without meaningfully protecting children.
Understanding the structural tension in Utah's position requires looking beyond legislation and into the economics of data centre incentives. In April 2025, Good Jobs First, a nonprofit watchdog organisation tracking economic development subsidies, published a report finding that at least ten states were already losing more than $100 million per year in tax revenue to data centres. Texas alone was losing an estimated $1 billion in fiscal year 2025.
A follow-up report in November 2025 revealed that of 32 states with tax incentives for data centres, 12 failed to disclose even aggregate revenue losses. Those 12 “dark” states included Utah. Good Jobs First found that states which had computed their returns determined they were losing between 52 and 70 cents for every dollar spent on sales tax exemptions.
Utah's own incentive structure is layered. Senate Bill 114, passed in 2020, provides sales and use tax exemptions for qualifying data centres of 150,000 square feet or more. The Economic Development Tax Increment Financing programme offers post-performance tax credit rebates of up to 30 per cent of new state revenue over project lifespans of five to twenty years. The Rural Economic Development Incentive Programme provides even more generous terms for investments in rural areas, with rebates of up to 50 per cent of new state revenues.
These incentives exist because every state wants data centres, and the companies building them have the leverage to choose among dozens of competing jurisdictions. The result is a dynamic in which the same state government articulating a “pro-human” vision for AI is simultaneously offering financial inducements to the companies whose products generate the harms that vision purports to address. This is not hypocrisy in the conventional sense. It is the structural reality of federalism in a market economy where capital is mobile and tax bases are not.
The most revealing question about Utah's “pro-human AI” framework is one that almost no one in the state's political establishment is willing to answer directly: what would genuine misalignment between child safety and economic growth actually require policymakers to sacrifice?
The honest answer begins with acknowledging that the business models Cox condemns and the economic development he celebrates are not merely adjacent. They are, in many cases, the same activity viewed from different angles. Meta's data centres process the same algorithmic recommendation systems that HB 464 identifies as causing adverse mental health outcomes in children. Google's computing infrastructure powers the same engagement optimisation that keeps adolescents scrolling past the curfew hours SB 194 attempted to enforce. The AI models that Creekstone's Delta Gigasite will train and serve are, in significant part, the same models whose deployment Utah's transparency legislation seeks to regulate.
Genuine sacrifice would mean accepting that some categories of AI development are incompatible with child safety and refusing to host them, even at the cost of losing investment to competing states. It would mean conditioning data centre tax incentives on compliance with child safety standards, not merely at the point of consumer interaction, but at the level of model design and training data. It would mean treating the development and deployment of AI as a continuum rather than maintaining the convenient fiction that the forge bears no responsibility for the sword.
It would also mean confronting the energy and environmental costs honestly. The nuclear infrastructure that Operation Gigawatt promises is at least a decade away from delivering meaningful power. TerraPower's plant in Kemmerer, Wyoming, the only firm nuclear project in Rocky Mountain Power's portfolio, will not come online until around 2032, and Utah will share its projected 500 megawatts with other western states. Holtec's SMR-300 reactors in Brigham City are even further out. In the interim, Utah's data centres will run overwhelmingly on natural gas, with the Novva data campus in West Jordan going so far as to request a presidential exemption from the Clean Air Act to operate diesel generators while its natural gas plant is completed. Residents near Joule's Millard County site will hear the equivalent of more than 400 semi-trucks idling around the clock, producing emissions year-round.
The “pro-human” framing allows these contradictions to coexist by promising that the harms are temporary and the benefits permanent: nuclear power will eventually replace natural gas, AI-ready workers will thrive in the new economy, and robust regulation will tame the technology's worst impulses. It is a compelling narrative. It is also one that depends on outcomes that have not yet materialised and on regulatory mechanisms that courts have already begun to dismantle.
To its credit, Utah's approach contains real substance that distinguishes it from mere performance. The regulatory sandbox model, whatever its limitations, represents a genuine attempt to learn from AI deployment rather than simply permitting it. The child safety bills, even when blocked by courts, have articulated legal theories that other states are building upon. Governor Cox's willingness to defy a White House of his own party on the question of state regulatory authority is not trivial. When he told the Politico Governors Summit, “States must help protect children and families while America accelerates its leadership in AI,” he was staking out a position with real political costs.
Representative Fiefia has framed the dynamic with precision: “There's been a narrative that's out there around AI that you either have innovation or you have safety, and you can't have both at the same time. I think there's a way to thread that needle.” The question is whether threading the needle is the same as solving the problem. A threaded needle holds fabric together; it does not change the fabric's nature.
The fabric, in this case, is an economic model in which the social media and AI companies that generate documented harms to children are also among the largest investors in the energy and computing infrastructure that Utah is actively courting. Meta is expanding in Eagle Mountain. Google owns 300 acres there. The data centres being built in Millard County will serve the same AI ecosystem whose consumer-facing products trigger the very harms Utah's legislature has spent three years trying to address.
A framework that regulates the use of these technologies while subsidising their development is not a contradiction in the logical sense. Both things can be true simultaneously: AI can create genuine economic value and AI can harm children. But the framework becomes something closer to managed contradiction when the economic incentives that reward development are orders of magnitude larger than the penalties that punish misuse. A $5,000 civil penalty for failing to disclose AI usage is not in the same moral universe as a 50 per cent tax rebate on hundreds of millions of dollars of data centre investment.
What makes Utah's experiment genuinely important is that it is happening at all. Most states are not even attempting to articulate a coherent framework for AI governance. They are either passing no legislation or passing legislation that the federal government promptly threatens to preempt. Utah is doing something more ambitious and, consequently, more revealing. It is attempting to build a pro-human AI agenda inside an economic structure that is fundamentally organised around accelerating AI deployment.
The $10 million investment in AI-ready workforce development is real. So are the $750 million in private investment flowing into Brigham City's nuclear ecosystem. The poll numbers showing 90 per cent of Utah voters supporting AI safety regulation are real. So are the tax exemptions that make Utah competitive in the race for data centre investment. These are not contradictions that can be resolved through better messaging or more precise legislative drafting. They are contradictions that reflect a genuine structural problem in American technology governance: the entities that create the most powerful technologies are also the entities with the most economic leverage over the communities that host them.
The honest version of “pro-human AI” would not pretend these tensions do not exist. It would name them, measure them, and create mechanisms for democratic accountability when child safety and economic growth genuinely conflict. It would require that data centre incentives include enforceable conditions tied to the downstream behaviour of the AI systems those centres support. It would treat transparency not as a disclosure requirement that applies only when a consumer thinks to ask, but as a structural obligation embedded in the business relationship between the state and the companies it subsidises.
Utah is not there yet. No state is. But the distance between where Utah stands and where genuine “pro-human” governance would require it to go is the distance between a political brand and a binding commitment. Closing that gap would require sacrifices that no state, and no governor, has yet been willing to make: turning away investment that fails to meet safety standards, conditioning tax benefits on verifiable child safety outcomes, and accepting that some forms of economic growth are not worth their human cost.
The data centres will be built. The nuclear reactors, eventually, will follow. The question that Utah has raised, whether a state can simultaneously serve as an engine of AI expansion and a guardian of the humans that expansion affects, remains genuinely unanswered. The answer will not come from summits, initiatives, or branding exercises. It will come from the moments when the state must choose between a tax dollar and a child's safety, and what it does when nobody is looking.
Deseret News. “Gov. Cox launches Utah's pro-human AI initiative at 2025 AI Summit.” Deseret News, 2 December 2025. https://www.deseret.com/business/2025/12/02/gov-cox-announces-utah-pro-human-ai-initiative/
The Salt Lake Tribune. “Utah will push for 'pro-human' AI, Gov. Cox announces, as Trump backs ban on state regulations.” The Salt Lake Tribune, 2 December 2025. https://www.sltrib.com/news/politics/2025/12/02/pro-human-ai-utah-gov-cox/
Utah Legislature. “S.B. 149 Artificial Intelligence Amendments.” 2024 General Session. https://le.utah.gov/~2024/bills/static/SB0149.html
IAPP. “Private-sector AI bill clears Utah Legislature.” IAPP, March 2024. https://iapp.org/news/a/utah-brings-gen-ai-into-consumer-protection-realm-with-bill-passage
KUER. “Trump is pressuring Utah on an AI bill. Gov. Cox says states should lead on policy.” KUER, 19 February 2026. https://www.kuer.org/politics-government/2026-02-19/trump-is-pressuring-utah-on-an-ai-bill-gov-cox-says-states-should-lead-on-policy
StateScoop. “Utah governor announces 'pro-human' AI plan, condemns federal preemption scheme.” StateScoop, December 2025. https://statescoop.com/utah-gov-spencer-cox-pro-human-ai-plan/
Axios. “Scoop: White House pressures Utah lawmaker to kill AI transparency bill.” Axios, 15 February 2026. https://www.axios.com/2026/02/15/white-house-utah-ai-transparency-bill
Deseret News. “Utah lawmakers respond to Trump White House memo on AI bill.” Deseret News, 17 February 2026. https://www.deseret.com/politics/2026/02/17/utah-legislature-responds-to-trump-administration-letter-targeting-state-regulations-for-artificial-intelligence/
Deseret News. “Will Trump administration allow Utah AI child protection law?” Deseret News, 22 January 2026. https://www.deseret.com/politics/2026/01/22/utah-legislature-supports-bill-to-force-ai-chatbots-to-care-about-kids-it-might-conflict-with-trump-executive-order-on-state-ai-regulations/
The Salt Lake Tribune. “Utah's data centers may consume quadruple the energy currently used in the state.” The Salt Lake Tribune, 9 February 2026. https://www.sltrib.com/news/environment/2026/02/09/utahs-data-centers-may-consume/
KSL. “World's largest data center campus could be coming to central Utah.” KSL.com, 2025. https://www.ksl.com/article/51355852/worlds-largest-data-center-campus-could-be-coming-to-central-utah
Power Magazine. “Utah Groups Look at Nuclear Options to Power World's Largest Data Center Site.” Power Magazine, December 2025. https://www.powermag.com/utah-groups-look-at-nuclear-options-to-power-worlds-largest-data-center-site/
BusinessWire. “Creekstone Energy, EnergySolutions Partner for Opportunity to Provide Nuclear Power for AI, Data-Infrastructure Demand.” BusinessWire, 11 December 2025. https://www.businesswire.com/news/home/20251211115059/en/Creekstone-Energy-EnergySolutions-Partner-for-Opportunity-to-Provide-Nuclear-Power-for-AI-Data-Infrastructure-Demand
Governor Spencer J. Cox. “NEWS RELEASE: Gov. Cox unveils 'Operation Gigawatt.'” Governor's Office, October 2024. https://governor.utah.gov/press/news-release-gov-cox-unveils-operation-gigawatt/
Fox 13 Now. “'Operation Gigawatt' to boost Utah's energy supply with nuclear, geothermal power.” Fox 13, 2024. https://www.fox13now.com/news/politics/operation-gigawatt-to-boost-utahs-energy-supply-with-nuclear-geothermal-power
Deseret News. “Gov. Spencer Cox announces major nuclear energy hub in Utah.” Deseret News, 17 November 2025. https://www.deseret.com/utah/2025/11/17/gov-cox-announces-site-for-utah-nuclear-power-plant/
NucNet. “Utah Announces Plans To Deploy Up To 10 Holtec Small Modular Reactors.” NucNet, November 2025. https://www.nucnet.org/news/utah-announces-plans-to-deploy-up-to-10-holtec-small-modular-reactors-11-2-2025
First Amendment Center. “Federal judge temporarily blocks Utah social media law aimed at protecting children.” Middle Tennessee State University, September 2024. https://firstamendment.mtsu.edu/post/federal-judge-temporarily-blocks-utah-social-media-law-aimed-at-protecting-children/
Utah News Dispatch. “Judge blocks Utah's social media laws, writing they likely violate the First Amendment.” Utah News Dispatch, 11 September 2024. https://utahnewsdispatch.com/2024/09/11/judge-blocks-utah-social-media-law/
Byte Back Law. “Utah Legislature Repeals and Replaces Utah Social Media Regulation Act.” Byte Back, March 2024. https://www.bytebacklaw.com/2024/03/utah-legislature-repeals-and-replaces-utah-social-media-regulation-act/
Institute for Family Studies. “Americans Want A.I. Safeguards By a 9-to-1 Margin.” IFS, 2025. https://ifstudies.org/blog/americans-want-ai-safeguards-by-a-9-to-1-margin
Institute for Family Studies. “Utah Poll: Voters in the Beehive State Want AI Safeguards.” IFS, January 2026. https://ifstudies.org/blog/utah-poll-voters-in-the-beehive-state-want-ai-safeguards
Good Jobs First. “Cloudy with a Loss of Spending Control: How Data Centers Are Endangering State Budgets.” Good Jobs First, April 2025. https://goodjobsfirst.org/cloudy-with-a-loss-of-spending-control-how-data-centers-are-endangering-state-budgets/
Good Jobs First. “Cloudy Data, Costly Deals: How Poorly States Disclose Data Center Subsidies.” Good Jobs First, November 2025. https://goodjobsfirst.org/cloudy-data-costly-deals-how-poorly-states-disclose-data-center-subsidies/
NPR. “Whistleblower's testimony has resurfaced Facebook's Instagram problem.” NPR, 5 October 2021. https://www.npr.org/2021/10/05/1043194385/whistleblowers-testimony-facebook-instagram
CNN. “Meta ignored warnings on Instagram's harm to teens, whistleblower says.” CNN, 7 November 2023. https://www.cnn.com/2023/11/07/tech/meta-ignored-warnings-instagrams-harm
Transparency Coalition AI. “TCAI Bill Guide: Utah's HB 286, the AI Transparency Act.” Transparency Coalition, 2026. https://www.transparencycoalition.ai/news/tcai-bill-guide-utahs-hb-286-the-ai-transparency-act
KSL. “Deadly AI relationships with children? One Utah lawmaker wants to make it illegal.” KSL.com, 2026. https://www.ksl.com/article/51437202/deadly-ai-relationships-with-children-one-utah-lawmaker-wants-to-make-it-illegal
Latitude Media. “Utah is taking a different approach to new data center load.” Latitude Media, 2025. https://www.latitudemedia.com/news/utah-is-taking-a-different-approach-to-new-data-center-load/
Governor's Office of Economic Opportunity. “Unleashing the Power of AI. Utah's Pro-Human Leadership.” State of Utah, 2025. https://business.utah.gov/news/unleashing-the-power-of-ai-utahs-pro-human-leadership/
Libertas Institute. “HB 286: Government Overreach in AI Development.” Libertas Institute, 2026. https://libertas.institute/bill/hb-286-government-overreach-in-ai-development/
CNBC. “In race to attract data centers, states can forfeit hundreds of millions of dollars in tax revenue to tech companies.” CNBC, 20 June 2025. https://www.cnbc.com/2025/06/20/tax-breaks-for-tech-giants-data-centers-mean-less-income-for-states.html
Nextgov/FCW. “Republican governor asserts states' right to legislate AI.” Nextgov/FCW, 19 February 2026. https://www.nextgov.com/artificial-intelligence/2026/02/republican-governor-asserts-states-right-legislate-ai/411530/
Inside Privacy. “Utah Repeals and Replaces Social Media Regulation Act.” Inside Privacy, March 2024. https://www.insideprivacy.com/social-media/utah-repeals-and-replaces-social-media-regulation-act/
Grist. “Can you build data centers in a desert without draining the water supply? Utah is finding out.” Grist, January 2026. https://grist.org/technology/utah-data-center-water-supply-meta-novva/
The Salt Lake Tribune. “Can Utah become a data center hub without draining its water supply?” The Salt Lake Tribune, 12 January 2026. https://www.sltrib.com/news/politics/2026/01/12/does-utah-have-enough-water-be/
Utah News Dispatch. “Bill to force data centers to publicly disclose water use advances.” Utah News Dispatch, 23 January 2026. https://utahnewsdispatch.com/2026/01/23/bill-to-force-data-centers-to-publicly-disclose-water-use-advances/
Courthouse News Service. “Utah urges 10th Circuit to reinstate social media law for minors.” Courthouse News, November 2025. https://www.courthousenews.com/utah-urges-10th-circuit-to-reinstate-social-media-law-for-minors/

Tim Green UK-based Systems Theorist & Independent Technology Writer
Tim explores the intersections of artificial intelligence, decentralised cognition, and posthuman ethics. His work, published at smarterarticles.co.uk, challenges dominant narratives of technological progress while proposing interdisciplinary frameworks for collective intelligence and digital stewardship.
His writing has been featured on Ground News and shared by independent researchers across both academic and technological communities.
ORCID: 0009-0002-0156-9795 Email: tim@smarterarticles.co.uk
from
No Man’s Logs
On collectionne rarement les grand-oncles. Le mien s'est éteint, il y a quelques jours, à l'âge de 93 ans. La vie ne nous a pas permis d'être proches. J'ignore presque tout de lui et ce mystère m'a toujours plu.
Immigré italien, il parlait trois langues : le français, l'arabe, l'italien. Il me parlait souvent, et avec fierté, de ses chaînes de télévision étrangères, qu'il captait grâce à un abonnement spécial, lui permettant de visionner des matchs de football non diffusés en France. C'était sa passion. Lorsqu'il se joignait aux repas familiaux, je me souviens me faufiler sous la table et lui lacer ses chaussures entre elles. Fort heureusement, il n'est jamais tombé. Après le repas, il me donnait timidement un billet de vingt euros caché dans une enveloppe, puis partait. Deux ans avant son décès, il m'invita dans son petit appartement toulousain. Il nous offrit, à ma femme et moi, du Nesquik, comme si j'étais toujours un petit garçon. Ce jour-là, je sentis qu'il voulait se confier et laisser en moi une empreinte plus profonde. Il me révéla quelques détails de sa vie : des photos de lui en uniforme militaire, des articles de journaux, et le récit de son voyage en Sicile, où il retrouva la maison de son enfance. Ce fut notre dernière rencontre.
Un être disparaît et tout est chamboulé. Je repense à mon arbre généalogique et remarque qu'une partie de mes ancêtres ont effectué un mouvement vers l'Ouest. De l'Italie, ils sont partis vers la France. Et je soupçonne ces mêmes ancêtres, d'après les résultats d'un test ADN, de descendre de lointains Magyars, Croates ou Slovaques. Aujourd'hui, me voilà installé sur le continent américain. Le cycle continue. Dois-je le briser ? À l'ouest, il n'y a plus rien, rien que l'océan. L'Europe me lance ses cris lointains.
L'architecte a secoué notre arbre et un fruit en est tombé. Je me suis retourné et ce grand-oncle n'était plus. D'autres fruits poussent au même instant. La vie continue.
from Douglas Vandergraph
There are moments in life when you feel something deep inside calling you to pause, slow down, and take a breath that feels older than your own lifetime. These moments never arrive with fanfare or noise. They slip into your day the way dawn slips through the cracks of a closed curtain, gentle enough to be missed by anyone not paying attention, yet powerful enough to change everything for the one who chooses to look. What you’re about to explore is one of those moments, because the truth at the center of this message is not merely an idea or a reflection or a warm spiritual thought. It is the living reminder that God Himself, the Author of existence, penned a letter to you long before you ever learned how to read. It is a letter written in the language of creation, the ink of eternity, and the grammar of divine love. And that letter has been sitting in front of you your entire life, carried by winds, wrapped in starlight, woven into the fibers of every sunrise, waiting for you to open it.
The beauty of this letter lies not just in its content, but in the realization that you were never meant to rush past it. You were never meant to treat life like a series of obligations you must survive or a map you must figure out before you’re allowed to move. Too many people live that way, treating each day like a problem to solve rather than a gift to unwrap. But when you stop long enough to look beyond the noise, beyond the anxiety, beyond the pressure of what people expect from you, you begin to realize that the world around you is not random. It is handwritten. It is intentional. It carries a signature. And that signature is the same one that crafted the oceans, carved the mountains, and breathed breath into your lungs. When you embrace that reality, you no longer feel like an accidental life wandering through a chaotic world. You feel like a chosen soul reading a letter addressed to you before time began.
This letter begins long before your story ever touched the earth. It begins in the heart of God, which has always been a well of unbreakable love and unending creativity. Imagine the magnitude of a God who could have chosen silence, yet instead chose expression. A God who could have kept His thoughts private, yet instead poured His imagination outward into galaxies, oceans, and the human spirit. Creation is not a backdrop; it is communication. It is God saying, with infinite tenderness, “I wanted you to see something beautiful so you would know what My love feels like.” Every river becomes a reminder that His grace flows without ending. Every mountain becomes a reminder that His strength stands unmoved. Every sunrise becomes a reminder that His mercy is new again today, no matter how yesterday unfolded. And when you begin to see life through that lens, your world does not become easier, but it does become clearer.
Clarity is one of God’s kindest gifts, though it rarely arrives in the way we expect. We often assume clarity is the result of explanations and answers, but Scripture shows us that clarity more often appears in presence and perspective. God did not give creation simply to decorate the earth; He gave creation to recalibrate your soul. When you walk outside and feel the wind brush your face, you are experiencing something that predates human history. When you look at the sky and see clouds drifting across a blue expanse, you are witnessing the canvas where God painted His first great masterpiece. When you stand at the edge of an ocean, you are standing in front of a reminder that your problems have boundaries, but His power does not. Creation is the letter God wrote to your spirit, reminding you that you were made for more than survival. You were made for relationship. You were made for awe. You were made for a love so deep it wraps around your soul before you even realize it is holding you.
Yet this world pulls your mind in a thousand directions, trying to convince you that you are alone, unsteady, unprepared, or unfinished. That is the lie that steals the joy of billions of people on earth. They don’t consciously reject God’s love; they simply get too busy to notice it. They walk past sunrises as if they are mundane. They ignore the healing power of a quiet moment as if stillness has no value. They treat nature like scenery instead of a divine communication written into the architecture of reality. And because they miss the letter, they miss the message. They miss the reminder that every day is an invitation to rediscover that the God who made the universe didn’t simply design life; He designed it with you in mind. You are not small in His eyes. You are not overlooked. You are not drifting through a meaningless narrative. You are being carried by hands so steady that the earth itself hangs on them.
This is why you must pause long enough to hear what God is saying to you today. When life becomes an unbroken stream of responsibilities, expectations, and obligations, the soul starts shrinking. You can be alive on paper but dried out on the inside. You can have a calendar full of commitments and a heart empty of wonder. Modern life is brilliant at creating busyness and terrible at creating meaning. God has always been the opposite. He is the One who steps into the noise of your life and whispers the one truth strong enough to reset you from the inside out: “I made this world beautiful so you would remember your soul is precious.” That is the line embedded into creation. That is the line you were meant to read every day. That is the line that tells you your existence is not an accident of biology but a reflection of divine intentionality.
When you look closely at your life, you begin to see that God’s letter has always been there, nudging you toward gratitude. Gratitude is not simply a virtue; it is a spiritual recalibration. It pulls you out of self-absorption and refocuses you on the truth that everything around you is a gift. Every breath you take is a miracle happening inside your chest. Every beat of your heart is an act of divine permission. Every moment of kindness you experience from another human being is a confirmation that God is still planting evidence of His goodness in the world. Gratitude doesn’t erase challenges, but it reframes them. It reminds you that even in seasons of struggle, God has not abandoned you. He is still writing. He is still speaking. He is still shaping your life with the same care He used to shape the stars.
Sometimes the deepest messages from God arrive not when life is peaceful, but when life feels overwhelming. Pain, loss, disappointment, and uncertainty all have a way of forcing the soul into a kind of stillness it would never choose voluntarily. When you walk through those seasons, it is easy to assume God has gone quiet or stepped back from your story. But often, the opposite is true. It is in those hardest moments that His letter becomes clearest. Not because He suddenly speaks louder, but because your soul becomes more aware. When life strips away distractions, you begin to notice things you rushed past before. You begin to hear the whisper of God in the wind, the warmth of His comfort in the sunlight, the reassurance of His presence in the simple act of waking up to a new morning. You begin to realize that God’s love doesn’t retreat during hardship; it surrounds you so completely that you only see its full power when everything else has been taken away.
Many people wander through life carrying the weight of unspoken questions: Why am I here? What is my purpose? Does God really see me? The answer to all those questions is already in the letter. Your purpose is not something you invent; it is something you uncover. It is woven into your being the same way color is woven into a sunrise. It is already there, waiting for your awareness to catch up. God wrote beauty into creation so your spirit could remember its identity. He wrote rhythm into seasons so you would understand that change is not a threat but a cycle. He wrote light into the morning so you would understand that hope is not fragile but relentless. These truths are not abstract ideas; they are invitations to live with a deeper awareness of who you are and who He is.
When you live with that awareness, your entire posture toward life shifts. You stop rushing. You stop competing with other people. You stop comparing your journey to someone else’s highlight reel. Instead, you move through life with a heart anchored in something eternal. You begin to see that every moment is sacred because every moment carries God’s fingerprints. The ordinary becomes holy. The mundane becomes meaningful. The overlooked becomes luminous. And the simple act of being alive becomes an opportunity to participate in the divine story unfolding around you. That is the power of opening the letter God wrote for you. It turns your life from something you endure into something you embrace.
What makes this letter even more extraordinary is that it was written not only in creation, but also in the internal landscape of your soul. God wrote His message into the very fabric of your being. He placed longing inside you so you would search for Him. He placed compassion inside you so you could mirror His heart. He placed wisdom inside you so you could walk through the world with discernment rather than fear. Everything inside you that desires goodness, beauty, truth, and love is evidence that the Author of your existence placed His signature in your spirit. You do not have to look outward to find Him; you only have to look inward with honesty and reverence. The desire you feel to live with purpose is the echo of His calling. The ache you feel for meaning is the echo of His design. The yearning you feel for love is the echo of His presence.
The tragedy for many believers is not that they lack faith, but that they lack awareness. They have faith in principle but forget to apply that faith in the ordinary rhythms of their day. They pray for God to speak while ignoring the ways He already is. They wait for lightning when He is speaking through leaves rustling in the trees. They wait for visions when He is speaking through the softness of morning light. They wait for dramatic signs when He is speaking through the peace that settles over them when they choose kindness over bitterness. Missing the letter does not mean God stopped writing; it means we stopped slowing down long enough to notice.
This is why today must be a turning point. Today must be the day you decide that you will no longer live like someone rushing past a masterpiece. Today must be the day you reclaim your position as someone who sees the sacred in the simple, the holy in the ordinary, the divine in the everyday. You must allow yourself to rediscover the beauty of creation not as scenery but as revelation. When you do, your heart opens in ways you forgot were possible. Your spirit softens. Your mind clears. Your fears loosen their grip. And you begin to see your entire life as the unfolding of a letter written by a God who loves you more than you have ever understood.
You were not created to merely pass through your days. You were created to experience them with the awareness that God is walking with you, speaking to you, guiding you, and loving you in ways your mind will never fully comprehend. And yet, He continues to speak through the world He made, inviting you—again and again—to slow down, breathe deeply, and remember that you are part of something vast, sacred, and unimaginably beautiful.
When you begin to embrace your life as a letter authored by God, you also begin to notice that nothing in your story has ever been wasted. Every joy, every heartbreak, every unexpected turn has carried a message. Some messages were gentle, like a whispered reminder of peace. Others were harder, carved into the seasons of struggle where you felt alone. But in hindsight, even those painful seasons carried handwriting. They carried lessons that could not have arrived any other way. God does not waste pain, and He does not waste seasons, and He certainly does not waste people. Everything that has happened to you is part of the letter meant to draw you closer to the heart of the One who made you. When you finally start reading your life through that perspective, you realize that nothing is random, and nothing is meaningless. Your tears were not ignored. Your prayers were not forgotten. Your hopes were not foolish. They were lines in the letter, shaping you into someone who could hear God more deeply, love more generously, and live more courageously than you ever could have before.
This type of awareness wakes up something holy inside you, something that has been dormant while you were consumed with the grind of daily life. It awakens the part of your spirit that recognizes the sacred. It brings you back to that childlike curiosity you once had before life taught you hesitation. A child does not walk outside and overlook the sky; a child looks up and marvels. A child does not walk past a flower without noticing its color; a child stops, stares, and takes in every detail. A child does not encounter the world as ordinary; everything is extraordinary. That is the posture God intended for you. Not childishness, but childlikeness. A heart open enough to wonder, humble enough to learn, and quiet enough to listen. The world trains you out of that posture, but God invites you back into it. His letter is one long invitation to recover the eyes of wonder and the heart of gratitude, because those are the eyes and the heart through which faith becomes alive again.
Once you begin reading the letter with those eyes, your relationship with God deepens in ways that theology alone can never achieve. Theology is essential, but experience is transformational. You can memorize a thousand verses and still miss the God who wrote them if your heart is disconnected. But when your spirit opens, when you begin to see God’s presence in creation, in moments, in silence, and in the rhythm of your everyday life, Scripture becomes illuminated from within. Words you’ve read for years suddenly feel alive, as if they are speaking directly to you. Promises you have known since childhood suddenly reveal layers you never noticed. Stories you’ve heard preached a hundred times suddenly echo with personal meaning. This is what happens when your inner world aligns with the God who authored both creation and Scripture. You no longer study the Bible only with your mind; you study it with a heart awakened to the One who breathed every word.
That awakening also shifts the way you see yourself. You begin to realize that if God wrote all of this with such detail, such care, and such intention, then He must also have written your life with the same precision. You begin to understand that you were crafted, not assembled. Formed, not thrown together. Designed, not improvised. There is a dignity to your existence that the world rarely acknowledges, but heaven does. God’s letter to you is not simply about the world around you; it is also about the worth within you. He created you to carry His image, which means you carry the capacity to love, to create, to forgive, to heal, and to illuminate the lives of the people around you. You carry divine fingerprint patterns in your soul, and when you see your life through that truth, insecurity loses its grip. You no longer walk through the world wondering whether you matter. You walk with the understanding that your existence itself is a sentence in God’s eternal story, and without you, that story would be incomplete.
As this awareness deepens, you also begin to notice the subtle ways God directs you. Not always through dramatic guidance or unmistakable signs, but often through quiet impulses that tug at your spirit. A sudden peace that settles after prayer. A gentle nudge that tells you to call someone. A conviction that stops you from stepping into something harmful. A clarity that arrives out of nowhere. These are the internal forms of God’s handwriting. There are moments when the external world speaks loudly and moments when the internal world whispers softly, but both are part of the same letter. The more you learn to trust these promptings, the more you begin to walk with an intuitive faith that does not require proof to move. You begin to step into life with the confidence that God is guiding you in each decision, not as a distant observer but as a present and loving Father who remains deeply involved in every detail of your journey.
This kind of faith causes gratitude to rise naturally. Gratitude becomes not something you practice, but something you embody. It becomes the baseline melody of your soul because you begin to see how much God has been involved in your life, even in moments you once thought were empty. Gratitude shifts your internal atmosphere. It pulls you out of fear and into trust. It pulls you out of resentment and into peace. It pulls you out of the striving that drains you and into the understanding that everything you have, everything you experience, and everything you are becoming is part of a divine orchestration. Gratitude unlocks a joy that is not dependent on circumstances but anchored in the unwavering love of God who continues writing His letter to you every single day.
Living with that gratitude also transforms the way you move through the world. You start treating people differently. You start listening more deeply. You start offering grace more freely. You start speaking with more kindness and acting with more patience. You begin to understand that if God has written a letter to you through creation, then perhaps your life is meant to become a letter to others through compassion. People read you long before they hear you. They read your tone, your presence, your patience, your gentleness, your steadiness. In a world starving for hope, your life becomes a message of hope—not because you are perfect, but because God is present in you. Letting His letter shape your life means letting His love shape your interactions, and the person who does that becomes a living reminder of God’s goodness everywhere they go.
One of the greatest transformations that happens when you truly open God’s letter is the shift in how you see time. Instead of racing through your days, you begin to savor them. Instead of fearing the future, you begin to trust it. Instead of regretting the past, you begin to understand it. Time feels different when you realize the Author of eternity is walking with you. Moments become precious. Seasons become meaningful. Delays become purposeful. You begin to recognize that nothing is late in the hands of God, nothing is wasted, and nothing is out of order. This realization creates a peace that settles deep in your bones, the kind of peace that cannot be shaken by circumstances or threatened by uncertainty. When God is the One writing your story, you learn to embrace time rather than resist it.
Eventually, this awareness leads you to the most important truth of all: the letter God wrote for you is not finished. Creation was the preface. Scripture is the foundation. Your life is the unfolding chapters. Every morning you wake up is another page. Every choice you make is another line. Every act of love is another sentence. God is not done speaking to you, through you, or within you. The letter is ongoing, alive, dynamic, and personal. It is a relationship written into reality, a conversation expressed through both the vastness of the universe and the small quiet moments of your daily life. When you understand this, life stops feeling like something happening to you and begins feeling like something happening with you. You are participating in God’s ongoing authorship, and each day becomes an opportunity to respond to His love with gratitude, trust, and humility.
The more you live from this place, the more confident you become that God’s love is not fragile or conditional. It is not dependent on what you have achieved, how much you understand, or how perfectly you have walked. His love is older than your mistakes, stronger than your fears, and deeper than you will ever fully comprehend. This is why creation remains so powerful. It is older than Scripture but confirms Scripture. It is vast but deeply personal. Every sunrise is God saying, “Start again.” Every night sky is God saying, “I am still here.” Every breath is God saying, “I am not finished with you.” The letter continues.
And when your life finally reaches its final chapter on this side of eternity, when the ink of earthly time dries and the fullness of God’s presence surrounds you, you will see that every moment—every joy, every trial, every unanswered question—was part of a story written with perfect love. You will see that the God who wrote the letter was with you at every step, guiding you, strengthening you, comforting you, shaping you. And you will understand, with overwhelming clarity, that you were never alone, never forgotten, never overlooked, and never unloved. God wrote a letter to you across creation, across Scripture, and across your life. Today is the day to open it fully, let it speak, and let it transform the way you live, breathe, and love.
Your friend, Douglas Vandergraph
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Roscoe's Story
In Summary: * Happy Texas Independence Day! It was fun following the Texas Rangers this afternoon as they played and won against the Cleveland Guardians. I'm listening now to the pregame show being broadcast by the Blue Devils Sports Network ahead of tonight's men's basketball between Duke and NC State. This will be my game before bedtime. When it ends I'll finish my night prayers and put myself to bed.
Prayers, etc.: * I have a daily prayer regimen I try to follow throughout the day from early morning, as soon as I roll out of bed, until head hits pillow at night. Details of that regimen are linked to my link tree, which is linked to my profile page here.
Starting Ash Wednesday, 2026, I've added this daily prayer as part of the Prayer Crusade Preceding the 2026 SSPX Episcopal Consecrations.
Health Metrics: * bw= 229.83 * bp= 137/80 (67)
Exercise: * morning stretches, balance exercises, kegel pelvic floor exercises, half squats, calf raises, wall push-ups
Diet: * o6:05 – 1 banana, 2 HEB Bakery cookies * 08:00 – 1 small bowl of seafood salad * 12:00 – rice cake, 1 ham & cheese sandwich * 14:00 – home made beef and vegetable soup
Activities, Chores, etc.: * 04:00 – listen to local news talk radio * 04:50 – bank accounts activity monitored * 05:00 – read, pray, follow news reports from various sources, surf the socials, and nap. * 13:45 – prayerfully reading the Pre-1955 Mass Propers for Monday of the Second Week of Lent – March 02, 2026 * 14:30 – follow the Rangers vs. Guardians MLB Spring Training Game * 16:45 – listen to relaxing music * 17:35 – Listening to the pregame show on the Blue Devils Sports Network ahead of their men's basketball tonight vs the North Carolina St. Wolfpack
Chess: * 13:10 – moved in all pending CC games