Remember when they were still trying to sell AI to us as a force for good? Remember the panels and keynotes? Remember the claims that the injection of this still-nascent technology into every aspect of our lives was in the pursuit of noble ends like curing disease and chatting with extraterrestrial beings? Those initial promises are now mostly fuzzy blackout memories, flickering through our collective snake oil hangover. But as more and more American cities snap out of the fugue state and address AI data centers as an urgent environmental and existential threat, it’s full steam ahead on the other side of the fight. This past week has been one of the AI industry’s most “mask off” yet, with fallout from the OpenAI Pentagon deal still ongoing and glowing reports on how the technology is “turbocharging” America and Israel’s attacks on Iran.
But for those who still haven’t connected the dots between these companies and the rise of global fascism, a clarifying connection TechCrunch pulled from a recent Bloomberg story helps spell it all out.
Painting a picture straight out of a Taylor Sheridan series, the Bloomberg piece details the rise of the “man camps” built to facilitate the construction of data centers. Amenity-filled pop-up villages in remote areas used to serve as a carrot for oil industry contractors. The model has since expanded to facilitate crypto mining and, now, propping up the AI industry.
As many of these extractive industry workers come from military backgrounds, the man camp is intentionally similar to that of a Forward Operating Base (FOB). Far from the traditional sort of company town trying to siphon the workers’ wages back via scrip, these man camps offer free steak dinners and rounds of simulated golf to the roughnecks coming in from a long day’s shift of desert construction, Bloomberg reports.
The camp featured in Bloomberg is being built to house and entertain over 1,000 workers needed for the construction of a 1.6-gigawatt data center in Dickens County, Texas. The shantytown will cost taxpayers $132 million in government contracts paid out to a company called Target Hospitality, according to TechCrunch. Though the Bloomberg story skates right past the fact that Target “also does work for the government on immigration detention,” TechCrunch went on to name the facility as the Dilley Immigration Processing Center, which is south of San Antonio. Reopening after Target signed a 5-year contract with CoreCivic in March 2025, the Dilley center has already become notorious for its treatment of the minors it holds in custody—reports of a measles outbreak, harrowing 911 calls about children struggling to breathe, and worm-riddled food just a sampling of the controversies to arise during the center’s first year in operation.
With tech companies budgeting an eye-watering $700 billion for data capacity expansion in 2026 alone and industry evangelists swearing they’re only just getting started, it’s no wonder Target Hospitality would want to try to wash off the stink of that ICE deal with a pivot to data centers. It’s a bountiful future the company’s chief commercial officer Troy Schrenk describes as “the largest, most actionable pipeline I’ve ever seen.”
Will Target Hospitality’s gravy train keep smoothly chugging along as an increasingly pissed and brazen populace makes it clear they want neither ICE nor data centers anywhere near their communities? Guess we’ll all find out together.
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![Scientists Built Amphibious Cyborg Cockroaches and We Regret to Inform You They Work
The humble cockroach: depending on where you live, they’re variously the bane of apartment dwellers, a tasty snacc, or a source of political inspiration. The cliché is that they’d be the only creatures to survive a nuclear apocalypse, and whether or not that’s true, you probably wouldn’t put them first in line for further enhancements to their already legendary ability to survive. However, it seems that no one’s told that to the folks at Nanyang Technological University in Singapore, because a group of researchers from the university’s School of Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering recently published a paper describing the process of fitting a cockroach with a diving suit. As the paper’s abstract explains, “The suit integrates a miniaturized oxygen generation module with a flexible waterproof shell, enabling continuous oxygen supply and isolation from surrounding water.” Or, in other words, the suit successfully allowed the insect to breathe underwater, turning it into a sort of nightmarish amphibious cyborg. If this sounds like a terrible idea at face value, console yourself with the knowledge that these cyber-roaches are designed to be used for benevolent purposes. As per the paper, said purposes include pipe inspections, “object transportation,” and, apparently, search-and-rescue missions. (Smash cut to 2031 and Elon Musk ranting about a “pedo roach”.)
Research into the creation of cyborg insects has been a thing for some time, both in academia and in the world of tech. On the latter point, readers may remember the RoboRoach, a $200 DIY kit for creating your own cyborg cockroach that was funded via Kickstarter in 2013. The kit is still available, and these days it seems to be marketed as a fun activity for kids—on the manufacturer’s website, it’s labelled as being for “Grade 9+” and “[Requiring] supervision.” If the idea of a bunch of 15-year-olds performing surgery on cockroaches makes you kinda queasy—supervision or not—well, you’re not alone.
Let’s get back to the Nanyang Technological University, where the experiments are presumably not being conducted by middle-schoolers. If you’ve ever wondered how a cockroach breathes, the paper explains that “like most terrestrial insects, [they] breathe through thoracic spiracles that take in oxygen directly from the air.” The “diving suit” is basically a flexible waterproof shell into which a miniature oxygen generator pumps oxygen, effectively creating a tiny breathing bubble around the insect’s air-intake thingamajigs. This allowed the insect to breathe underwater for up to three hours, although it seems there were some initial, um, design issues to sort out: “Dorsal mounting of the oxygen generator on the cockroach created significant water-resistance during underwater locomotion… causing postural instability and rollover.” Once this issue was resolved, it seems the roaches got on just fine underwater, exhibiting “stable and smooth underwater walking without rollover.” The researchers conclude that the idea is a winner, and that it could be “potentially extended to other terrestrial cyborg insect platforms, such as [other] cockroaches, locusts and beetles.” Amphibious locusts! What could possibly go wrong? #Scientists #Built #Amphibious #Cyborg #Cockroaches #Regret #Inform #Workcockroaches,cyborgs Scientists Built Amphibious Cyborg Cockroaches and We Regret to Inform You They Work
The humble cockroach: depending on where you live, they’re variously the bane of apartment dwellers, a tasty snacc, or a source of political inspiration. The cliché is that they’d be the only creatures to survive a nuclear apocalypse, and whether or not that’s true, you probably wouldn’t put them first in line for further enhancements to their already legendary ability to survive. However, it seems that no one’s told that to the folks at Nanyang Technological University in Singapore, because a group of researchers from the university’s School of Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering recently published a paper describing the process of fitting a cockroach with a diving suit. As the paper’s abstract explains, “The suit integrates a miniaturized oxygen generation module with a flexible waterproof shell, enabling continuous oxygen supply and isolation from surrounding water.” Or, in other words, the suit successfully allowed the insect to breathe underwater, turning it into a sort of nightmarish amphibious cyborg. If this sounds like a terrible idea at face value, console yourself with the knowledge that these cyber-roaches are designed to be used for benevolent purposes. As per the paper, said purposes include pipe inspections, “object transportation,” and, apparently, search-and-rescue missions. (Smash cut to 2031 and Elon Musk ranting about a “pedo roach”.)
Research into the creation of cyborg insects has been a thing for some time, both in academia and in the world of tech. On the latter point, readers may remember the RoboRoach, a $200 DIY kit for creating your own cyborg cockroach that was funded via Kickstarter in 2013. The kit is still available, and these days it seems to be marketed as a fun activity for kids—on the manufacturer’s website, it’s labelled as being for “Grade 9+” and “[Requiring] supervision.” If the idea of a bunch of 15-year-olds performing surgery on cockroaches makes you kinda queasy—supervision or not—well, you’re not alone.
Let’s get back to the Nanyang Technological University, where the experiments are presumably not being conducted by middle-schoolers. If you’ve ever wondered how a cockroach breathes, the paper explains that “like most terrestrial insects, [they] breathe through thoracic spiracles that take in oxygen directly from the air.” The “diving suit” is basically a flexible waterproof shell into which a miniature oxygen generator pumps oxygen, effectively creating a tiny breathing bubble around the insect’s air-intake thingamajigs. This allowed the insect to breathe underwater for up to three hours, although it seems there were some initial, um, design issues to sort out: “Dorsal mounting of the oxygen generator on the cockroach created significant water-resistance during underwater locomotion… causing postural instability and rollover.” Once this issue was resolved, it seems the roaches got on just fine underwater, exhibiting “stable and smooth underwater walking without rollover.” The researchers conclude that the idea is a winner, and that it could be “potentially extended to other terrestrial cyborg insect platforms, such as [other] cockroaches, locusts and beetles.” Amphibious locusts! What could possibly go wrong? #Scientists #Built #Amphibious #Cyborg #Cockroaches #Regret #Inform #Workcockroaches,cyborgs](https://gizmodo.com/app/uploads/2026/07/cyborg-cockroach-1280x853.png)
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