Paid in Full: The Data Center Economy and the Criminalized Protester

A Trump government contract reached the public last month by accident, after CoreCivic’s lawyers attached it to an email to the Houston Chronicle. The figures it revealed put the cost of running Dilley, the only family detention center in the country, at about $15.6 million a month, $13.1 million to operate and $2.5 million for medical care. The cost to taxpayers has been made constant, whether the facility is full or nearly empty.

The problem has been known much longer. A ICE itself called the Dilley arrangement unique, a fixed monthly fee for the entire facility regardless of how many people are held. A Homeland Security inspector general found the contract improperly obtained, routed through a middleman town in a way that shielded the operator and left the agency with no assurance it served taxpayers or detainees.

Pay for prisoners was improper, unaccountable, and fixed to a building. Why?

Look deeper, into the context, the geography, and the care model of “centers”. The human detention operator collects the same sum whether their water is clean or not, whether a sick child is seen or left unseen (to die). Lawmakers who toured in May counted fewer than 400 people, including 93 children, and ran the division.

Taxpayers are being charged roughly $37,500 per detained person per month.

Most people being held carry no criminal charge, and many have active asylum claims being ignored. They are being seized on streets far from any border, like the five year old taken outside his Minnesota home. The revenue is the purpose of these centers, not justice, not safety. CoreCivic reported $116.5 million in profit for 2025, up nearly 70 percent, and guided investors higher. Dilley alone generated $180 million in revenue, inside a $45 billion congressional expansion of detention. The same record documents a measles outbreak and food and water detainees call moldy and foul. A toddler died, after release in the facility’s earlier years.

This is a known pattern in history.

It’s the ordinary shape of administered harm. Atrocity at scale rarely sustains itself as spectacle. Spectacle draws resistance, so the apparatus migrates into procurement within an already established, rushed trajectory. The lethal variable to watch for is a revenue line uncoupled from the human outcome, a fixed fee or a quota that pays the same whether the people inside are tended or neglected. The pattern is neglect performing the harm within a trajectory so no one has to authorize it. It’s been called the crematorium that needs no fire.

Germans study the history that Americans rarely understand. In 1933 voices of opposition were violently erased, leading to the “cold crematorium” of camps that killed by willful neglect.

The evidence tends to precede the public reckoning, because it’s unbelievable, too hard for people to process until it’s too late. On December 9, 1931, a Munich newspaper printed a leaked Nazi plan for the Jews and the euphemism, Endlösung. The “final solution” was known long before the regime would invade neighboring countries and spin up industrialized murder camps. The paper was attacked for saying it, then shut down violently, its reporters sent to Dachau, the first Nazi concentration camp, built to detain and break the regime’s political opponents, where many were murdered.

Memorial block for Richard Lipinski, a well known Leipzig SPD politician who voted against Hitler “Enabling Act” in 1933 and was put into “protective custody” and died from “effects of his detention”. Phrases that to this day try to normalize fascism, literal murder for power.

Administered harm shows up like a payment schedule, for outcomes that should be raising the highest alarms. Notably, Britain read the warnings through the 1930s and held back from stopping Hitler in March 1936, when his troops entered the Rhineland under orders to retreat if France resisted. London and Paris accommodated instead of attacked. Why did they wait?

This contract just became public because a lawyer attached the wrong file to an email. Who today sees it and waits? What are they waiting for?

Target Hospitality owns the Dilley family detention center and runs its food service, the place notorious for a measles outbreak and 911 calls about children struggling to breathe. CoreCivic operates it. In March, Target announced a pivot into data center company towns, to wash the stink of the ICE deal off its name. The lodging contractor moved its brand from feeding and housing a detention center to housing the crews who build data centers.

When you look at the datacenter maps, you are looking at land permits, a slab, tilt-up walls, and a power easement that may never energize. Very large campuses of empty boxes on cheap land in scarce-water country, their end use left unsettled.

Source: Brockovich Data Centers

A July 2025 executive order made the data centers critical infrastructure. Federal agencies and fusion centers then began tracking fictional “anti-tech violent extremism,” sweeping peaceful critics and town-hall attendees into the framework built to criminalize protected political speech into domestic violent extremists. The order protects the box, which rhymes with the detention economy, even when it does not yet show a data center becoming a human center. Oppose the data center box, and the security state opens a terrorism file.

A terrorism designation of people outside the data centers feeds the same detention expansion that the Dilley contract pays for. It’s like a fascist LEGO set: build the box, file the objector as a terrorist, fund detention that pays whether the beds fill or not, and the only open question left is how all those unpopular empty boxes will be making any money.

@BenHodgesUpdates: How to Spot YouTube Spreading Russian AI Propaganda

YouTube has been surfacing a LOT of synthetic war content lately, and the attribution question deserves more care than the platform gives it. The @BenHodgesUpdates channel is not Hodges, not affiliated with him, and the production cadence is impossible for genuine interviews. Whether it runs for ad revenue or for Moscow, or both, matters less than you’d think, because hyper-inflated Ukrainian victory content serves Putin’s KGB-trained interests either way: saturate the audience with imminent Russian collapse, and every week reality fails to deliver erodes trust in the real analysts whose names were stolen to sell it. President Wilson’s propagandists understood this in WWI, and so do the YouTube content slop factories perhaps sitting in Texas and Florida.

This unauthorized impersonation channel is reportable under YouTube’s impersonation and misleading-content policies. And you should report it. But more importantly you should ask why YouTube engineering doesn’t flag such dangerous integrity breaches of their platform.

Start with the channel description, which ends with “For business inquiries and partnerships: [Your Email Address Here]”. A template that for years never filled in this obvious blank, is a giant flag all on its own.

Then look at the timing and monetization model. The channel joined November 20, 2022, yet all 14 videos were rushed in the last four weeks at roughly one per day. That’s an aged or purchased account repurposed for a content farm. And every video is a 23–29 minute “exclusive” with the same general. Past the eight minute mark YouTube permits mid-roll advertising, meaning a daily half-hour of synthetic narration is for revenue generation on fraud, not interview scheduling. Compare it with the real Ben Hodges who does real interviews (Ukrainer, CNBC, BBC, Silicon Curtain). No General, including him, runs a daily half-hour sit-down interview pace like this.

And what about the data? I see 15.8K subscribers and 340K views off 14 videos in three weeks, consistent with the documented wave of AI-narrated Ukraine war slop channels that clone the voices of Hodges, Petraeus, and similar figures over stock footage.

Content fails as well. Titles are “Ukraine Just ERASED Putin’s Crown Jewel… BLINDS Putin’s Nuclear Fleet FOREVER | Gen Ben hodges”, with inconsistent capitalization across uploads (“Ben Hodges”, “ben hodges”, “Gen Ben hodges”), a dropped-letter typo (“ULEASHED Hell”) of the kind language models almost never make, betraying the human hand retyping machine output into the upload form, as well as ellipses, all-caps panic verbs. It’s lighting up as hallmarks of machine-generated titles, only lightly supervised.

Source: YouTube

We haven’t even clicked into a video yet and already it’s a clear takedown case, built on an account that sat aged for years before activation three weeks ago.

The pipeline of metadata convicts the channel on its own. Hello YouTube? Hello?

Now, the juicy part. What about content spread by the channel? Before I begin, let me refer to my two degrees with a specialization on asymmetric conflict and disinformation. That’s not an appeal to any sense of authority, rather to say what follows isn’t a light skill picked up in a day. I highly recommend study and practice of this subject, as you will see improvements in your own ability to detect subtle threats. That being said, YouTube could easily detect this with some simple engineering by experts and expert tools.

  1. The seed: a bridge near Chonhar connecting occupied Crimea with Russian-controlled southern Ukraine was damaged in a Ukrainian drone strike overnight on June 7, confirmed by the Ukrainian military, and a second drone strike on June 9 halted traffic again, followed by a reported missile strike on the Henichesk–Arabat Spit bridge early on June 10. Note that June 7 is confirmed by Kyiv with video, then June 10 rests on the Russian occupation official Saldo, and the June 11 reports of bridges hit at Armiansk and Krasnoperekopsk trace back to social media posts relayed by news aggregators. The script bases its loudest point of certainty on the least confirmed ones.
  2. The laundry: the commander of the 1st Separate Assault Regiment said the Chonhar strike was carried out specifically to cut fuel supplies to the Russia’s 37th Motorised Rifle Brigade.
  3. The gap: the drone strikes punched roughly one-metre holes in the bridge deck while the structural ribs were not compromised, and there is no confirmed evidence the bridge has been destroyed; the immediate military effect remains difficult to assess independently. Russian engineers were already running a pontoon crossing at Chonhar, visible in satellite photos. The script converts that into “permanent damage,” six bridges “rendered operationally useless,” and 110,000 troops in a “logistical trap.” Note the title says 80,000. The script says 110,000. Can’t be both.
  4. The fog: Pantsir blind spots “mapped and cataloged,” electronic warfare signatures “recorded and analyzed,” a four-hour attack wave from midnight to 0400, “weeks of patient, methodical intelligence collection.” No public source contains any of this. It’s the texture of analysis without sources, which means an LLM hallucinating a dense fog to disappear the real headlines.
  5. The artifacts: the interview has no interview. No questions, no first-person voice of a retired three-star. It’s omniscient-narrator machine-generated prose that has “Gen. Ben Hodges” stapled to it, so thinly connected it could be Donald Duck.

Now let’s go deeper into the ruse, as a logic test of integrity. An analytic framing blows the script apart.

  • Bad addition: Title: 80,000. Opening: 50,000 mainland plus 60,000 Crimea. Which?
  • Bad geometry: The “encirclement” claim depends on Kerch Bridge being the only supply route other than Black Sea ferries to 50,000 mainland troops. But cutting Crimea crossings isolates Crimea, not the other way around (the mainland). Forces in Zaporizhzhia and Kherson are supplied through their eastern land corridor from Rostov through Mariupol, Berdiansk, and Melitopol. It’s common sense, really. And the script admits as much because the land bridge is slipped out as a shift of supplies to “Russian port logistics along the Sea of Azov coastline”. The real General Hodges would be talking about the land corridor as the target, meaning hype about a Crimea artery doesn’t square his circle.
  • Bad timeline: The opening states “between June 9th and June 11th… six bridges in 48 hours,” then states Chonhar was first struck with significant damage “in the days preceding June 9th”. The 48-hour window is a hallucination contradicted minutes later. Also, since I was quite open on this blog about naval drone strikes in 2023 (as well as Elon Musk being Putin’s muppet, and the October 2022 unmanned surface vessel raid on Sevastopol that opened the genre after a Neptune missile sank the Moskva) let me point out another tell. This script says strikes were “in 2023 and 2024”. Nope. The drone strike was July 2023, full stop. The next successful attack came in June 2025 and it was no drone: SBU agents spent months mining the underwater supports and detonated 1,100 kg of TNT equivalent at 4:44 in the morning. Nothing landed in 2024, and that gap year is well-known for well-known reasons.
  • Bad physics: The claim “pontoon bridges cannot carry main battle tanks at scale” is dumber than rocks. Russian PMP ribbon bridging is for… tanks. The actual problem is being vulnerable to attacks, not basic operations.
  • Bad strategy: When the script says “none of this happens overnight” it clashes with its earlier claim that Ukraine reports “direct operational consequence” of day old strikes is “observable reductions in incoming artillery fire”. Which is it?
  • Bad source: We have no confirmed evidence the bridge has been destroyed. The effect is still hard to assess, while we do know the deck has one-meter wide holes in it. Meanwhile the script floats all kinds of intelligence detail with zero evidence, about Pantsir maps of blind spots and EW signatures, attack waves, contingency doctrines, share of traffic and re-rerouting… none of it sourced.

The method of military intelligence spreading disinformation, since at least President Woodrow Wilson’s efforts in WWI, has been to take a checkable fact and surround it with unfalsifiable details.

After WWI Edward Bernays left Wilson’s Committee on Public Information to sell the same methods to corporations. By his own account, a foreign correspondent told him in 1933 that Goebbels kept Crystallizing Public Opinion in his library and was using it as a basis for the campaign against the Jews of Germany.

The effect of this YouTube channel is a hallucinated geography taped together from a few precise details.

A real analysis channel with a real General would be the exact inversion, where the details are not exact yet the geography is always right.

The real Ben Hodges. First person, accountable, and picking fights with the Germans, under his own name. The Russian Navy “hiding behind Crimea even though Ukraine has no Navy” read as hyperbole, and then as prophecy once the Black Sea Fleet was devastated and fled Sevastopol.

“500% Less”: How Elon Musk Math Fuels Trump

Let’s set aside the fact that what Elon Musk says about cars is a provable lie.

Focus on his math here.

Source: Twitter

over 500% *less*

That’s Elon Musk math. On fire safety.

Now look at Trump, November 2025, announcing the GLP-1 deal with “tremendous cuts, 200 percent, 300 percent, 500 percent, 700 percent and even more than that”. Then in his prime-time address he claimed negotiated reductions of 400 to 600%, with the July version running to drug price cuts of as much as 1,500 percent, numbers he himself called beyond what anyone thought achievable.

These grifters, obviously operating as cruel con-men, converged in the public eye and then… kept on grifting.

A percentage decrease past 100 means the drug seller pays you to take it, or that the Tesla extinguishes nearby fires.

Idiots?

No. Historians study how Hitler used a strategy of being considered an idiot, a clown, to disarm his targets and kill them.

“Parked Teslas Keep Catching on Fire Randomly, And There’s No Recall In Sight” –The Drive 2019
Source: tesla-fire.com

The problem in the West isn’t just one man, one speech, one product. The problem is how markets run unregulated, without sufficient safety against those spreading hate through “free speech extremist” tactics of targeted fraud.

Now let’s talk reality.

The US fleet baseline is vehicles with a median age over twelve years, plus arson, plus parked junkers, plus carbureted antiques. Out of that ancient and often unmaintained fleet, electric fires are a leading or second cause of fires. Electric fires, as in combustion engines have batteries and wires that start fires. Take the combustion away and you still have the exact same cause of the fire. Electric fires.

The NFPA cause data for highway vehicle fires puts electrical distribution and mechanical failure at the top of ignition sources. The gasoline is the accelerant, rarely the ignition. Fuel tanks don’t spontaneously combust; frayed wiring harnesses, failed alternators, and leaking fluids onto hot exhaust do the igniting. So Musk spread dangerous lies, as his “massive amounts of highly flammable fuel” framing inverts the mechanism. An EV carries both the energy store and the electrical system, and when the energy store itself enters thermal runaway you get a fire that reignites for days and resists suppression.

Tesla is the massive amounts of highly flammable fuel (volatile chemical cells), with a known unsafe and unnecessary design flaw. Read the “nail in Tesla coffin” report, and you will see how and why other electric car makers don’t burn. Fire is a big Tesla problem.

Teslas, at the time Musk blew the most smoke about fire, were almost all under five years old, garaged, owned by affluent early adopters who didn’t know enough about him or cars in general to see the fraud. New gasoline cars, excluding electrical causes of fire, against Teslas was the honest comparison. More to the point, Tesla engineering grows worse over time, so their design flaws not only don’t get investigated, they compound and increase in likelihood and severity.

Elon Musk Play Has Three Acts

Read this three act play from the bottom.

Who could have predicted militant hate groups growing on X carrying out heinous acts of violence?

Police were warned for months about addresses targeted in Belfast riots.

Exclusive: Monitoring group warned PSNI for eight months after far-right networks began circulating so-called hitlist of addresses.

And then go back and read 2023 news:
Elon Musk X brand is the Swastika“.

This artist’s rendering of the X brand was deleted from the platform by the self-promoting “free speech extremist” Elon Musk. Source: Ai Wei Wei

And then look at two years before that:

The CEO of Tesla does in fact seem to exhibit Ford-like “permanent improvisation” (abuse of trust) that signals fascism, and he repeatedly makes only positive Hitler references.

And three years before that, he kept saying his vision of “better” is the world on fire:

“Parked Teslas Keep Catching on Fire Randomly, And There’s No Recall In Sight” –The Drive 2019

The warnings about Elon Musk since at least 2019 have come to this. The UK now has a lot of explaining to do for enabling militant hate campaigns by the maker of explosive concentrated chemical fuel storage (Tesla).

Source: Elon Musk