Part 2 of The Memphis File. Boxtown was founded by formerly enslaved people in 1863. By 1975 the city of Memphis was getting sued in federal court for not providing the neighborhood with basic services. By the time xAI showed up, Boxtown was surrounded by a natural gas plant, an oil refinery, a steel mill, and a medical sterilization plant releasing a known carcinogen. Cancer risk was already four times the national average – before xAI. Here are the five real harms every city should worry about when a data center comes to town, and the loophole xAI used to skip every public review.
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#1: The Quiet Door: The Concierge Desk, The NDAs, And Who Found Out Last
By the time the Memphis City Council found out Elon Musk was building the world’s largest supercomputer in their city, the deal was already done. The Greater Memphis Chamber held twelve invitation-only meetings, ran a five-person concierge desk for one company, and made fourteen city employees sign NDAs — including the mayor and the utility CEO. Council member Rhonda Logan said it on the record: ‘We don’t know anything. This is already here and we don’t know anything.’ The NDA isn’t protection. The NDA is the corruption.
Read MoreThe Memphis File: This Isn’t A Story About AI. It’s A Story About Corruption.
Anthropic isn’t building a second data center in Memphis. They’re renting compute from xAI’s existing supercomputer. So why does that matter? Because watching everyone panic about the wrong thing made me realize: most people are mad about xAI for the wrong reasons. The villains here aren’t billionaires from Pretoria. They’re local. They’re the people who took the meeting, signed the NDAs, and kept their jobs. This is a corruption story, and over the next ten essays I’m going to walk you through every name, every dollar, and every meeting Memphis didn’t get to attend.
Read MoreMemphis Police Pepper-Sprayed the Protest Marshals at the No Kings March
Memphis held a massive No Kings march Saturday. It ended with pepper spray, three arrests, and a brand-new Tennessee law used to charge the people keeping marchers safe.
Read MoreCongressman Cohen, Winning Memphis Isn’t the Same as Leading It
An Open Letter to My Congressman About Why Winning Isn’t the Same as Leading Dear Congressman Steve Cohen,I’ve been voting for you since you first ran for Congress back in… Read More