Patriots, here's a story that should make every freedom-loving American smile: while Big Tech vultures circle our precious farmland like hungry buzzards, one brilliant American startup is fighting back with a solution so simple it was literally hatched at a Chick-fil-A.
As mega-corporations continue their relentless assault on America's heartland—gobbling up family farms and rural communities to build massive data centers—a company with real vision is asking the obvious question: why not put these computer warehouses in the ocean where they belong?
"Our goal is to make terawatts," says Garth Sheldon, representing what could be the most patriotic tech solution we've seen in years. This isn't just about cheaper energy costs, folks—this is about saving the soul of rural America from Silicon Valley's greedy tentacles.
Big Tech's War on America's Heartland
We've all seen the headlines: tech giants swooping into small towns, waving massive checks at farmers and local officials, promising jobs while they transform productive agricultural land into sterile computer farms. These aren't just business deals—they're cultural warfare against the backbone of America.
But this ocean-based solution flips the script entirely. Instead of surrendering our most fertile soil to corporate overlords who probably can't tell wheat from soybeans, we're talking about harnessing the vast empty spaces of our oceans.
American Innovation vs. Corporate Colonization
This is what real American innovation looks like—solving problems without destroying communities. While the tech establishment continues its land-grabbing spree, treating rural America like their personal playground, actual entrepreneurs are thinking outside the box.
The genius is in its simplicity: unlimited ocean space, natural cooling, and zero displacement of farmers or small towns. No more watching helplessly as Big Tech transforms agricultural communities into industrial wastelands.
President Trump's America First energy agenda just got a powerful new ally. This kind of innovative thinking—born over chicken sandwiches, no less—represents the entrepreneurial spirit that made America great.
The question isn't whether this technology will work. The question is: will we embrace American ingenuity that protects our heartland, or continue letting tech giants colonize rural America one farm at a time?
