Corsicana Area Community

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UNITY = in DIVERSITY= GROWTH For all you Aggie Fans in Cana Country"When Richard King died at the Menger Hotel in San An...
06/14/2026

UNITY = in DIVERSITY= GROWTH
For all you Aggie Fans in Cana Country

"When Richard King died at the Menger Hotel in San Antonio in April 1885, the obituaries praised him as a titan. What they didn't print was the truth his widow found in the ledgers: $500,000 in debt — nearly $18 million in today's money — buried beneath the legend.
Henrietta King was 53 years old.
She was the daughter of a Presbyterian minister, a woman known for her quiet discipline and strong principles. She once had her diamond earrings covered in black enamel because she felt their sparkle was too extravagant. Wealth and status never interested her. Family, faith, and responsibility did.
Yet when her husband died, everything seemed to be falling apart.
Her son had already passed away. More family tragedies would follow. The King Ranch itself, stretching across 614,000 acres of South Texas, was struggling through severe drought. The cattle were suffering, the finances were strained, and many would have considered selling the land and walking away.
Henrietta chose a different path.
Dressed in widow's black, she stepped forward instead of retreating. She brought in her son-in-law, Robert Kleberg, to oversee daily operations, but the major decisions remained hers. Slowly and steadily, she began transforming the future of the ranch.
She invested in artesian wells across land many believed was worthless. She supported programs to fight the devastating tick fever epidemic that was destroying cattle herds throughout Texas. She also backed breeding experiments that eventually produced the Santa Gertrudis, the first beef cattle breed developed in the Western Hemisphere.
But Henrietta's vision extended beyond the ranch.
In 1903, she made a remarkable decision. To attract a railroad through South Texas, she donated 90,000 acres of her own land. She understood that isolated land struggles, while connected land grows.
Around that railroad depot, a town emerged.
She helped establish schools, donated land for churches, supported medical facilities, and provided land that would later become home to Texas A&M University–Kingsville.
The town was named Kingsville.
Every deed she signed carried one condition: alcohol could never be sold there. It was a promise she made and never abandoned.
For forty years, Henrietta continued wearing black. Not as a public display of grief, but as a private commitment to the husband she had lost and the land she had chosen to protect.
When she died on March 31, 1925, at the age of 93, the ranch had grown from 614,000 acres to more than 1.1 million acres. She had become one of the wealthiest women in the world, but her greatest achievement was the stability she created for countless families who depended on that land.
At her funeral, something extraordinary happened.

Two hundred Kineños, the Mexican-American cowboys of King Ranch, arrived on horseback. Some had traveled for two days across the brush country to pay their respects.

At the graveside, they formed a single line. One by one, each rider slowly circled her grave, hat pressed against his chest, before quietly moving on.
No speeches.
No ceremony.
Just respect.
Henrietta King never sought attention or glory. Yet she left behind a town, a university, a cattle breed, and a ranch that endured for generations.
And perhaps her greatest tribute came from two hundred Mexican - American horsemen who rode for days simply to tip their hats and say goodbye. "

An orangutan stood in front of a bulldozer and reached out with its bare hands.Not because it was aggressive.Not because...
06/13/2026

An orangutan stood in front of a bulldozer and reached out with its bare hands.

Not because it was aggressive.

Not because it was trying to fight.

But because its home was disappearing.

Deep within the rainforests of Borneo, wildlife rescuers captured a moment that has since touched millions of people around the world. As logging equipment cleared the forest, an orangutan reportedly watched as the trees around it were torn down one by one.

Then, with nowhere else to go, it approached the excavator and grabbed hold of the machine's bucket.

The image is difficult to forget.

A creature whose entire world exists within the forest standing face-to-face with the force that was removing it.

The orangutan survived.

Members of a rescue team intervened, safely relocated the animal, and brought it to a rehabilitation center where it could recover.

But the forest it depended upon was not so fortunate.

Stories like this can evoke powerful emotions because they force us to see environmental destruction through a different lens.

We often discuss deforestation in statistics.

Acres lost.

Carbon emissions.

Biodiversity decline.

Economic impacts.

Important numbers, certainly.

But behind every statistic is a living world.

A mother searching for food.

A nest built high in the canopy.

A family that has occupied the same stretch of forest for generations.

When a forest disappears, it is not merely trees that are lost.

Entire relationships vanish with it.

Orangutans are among our closest relatives in the animal kingdom, sharing approximately 97% of our DNA. They are intelligent, emotional, tool-using beings capable of problem-solving, memory, and deep social bonds.

Looking into the eyes of an orangutan can feel strangely familiar.

Perhaps because, in some way, we recognize ourselves.

What strikes me most is how often nature communicates without words.

That image of an orangutan reaching toward a machine became powerful because people instantly understood it.

No translation was necessary.

No explanation was required.

The gesture seemed to carry a universal message:

"I live here."

As humanity continues to shape the planet, we are increasingly faced with a choice.

Can development and conservation coexist?

Can we meet human needs without erasing the living systems that sustain countless other species?

Can we learn to see forests not merely as resources, but as communities of life?

The future of many species may depend on how we answer those questions.

Perhaps one of the greatest measures of our progress will not be what we build.

But what we choose to protect.

What are your thoughts on balancing development, conservation, and the protection of wildlife habitats?

I'd love to hear your reflections below. 🌿🦧✨

The United States has 5,400 data centers. 1 per about 64,000 people. Other countries have less than 600 data centers and...
06/13/2026

The United States has 5,400 data centers. 1 per about 64,000 people. Other countries have less than 600 data centers and that is including China and Russia. (In Comments)

A Surveillance System, This is what it is a control mechanism, that could blow up, why are they allowing them close to towns and people. A different kind of war. For peoole control. And what are the steps in control - remove necessity water, Food - Farmers Agricultural. Wake up America.

The first quarter of 2026 produced the most blocked and delayed data center projects on record, according to a new study shared with NBC News.

The study found that data center opponents blocked or delayed at least 75 projects nationwide worth about $130 billion from January through March, the most in a three-month period since the group began tracking in 2023.

Data center construction has become a major political issue, with groups of residents opposed to the effects the large developments have on energy consumption and the environment, among other concerns.

Data center proponents, meanwhile, have said the concerns are overblown or based on faulty data and have promoted the economic benefits generated by the developments, which are needed to power the AI boom.

Read more: nbcnews.to/4uzmA3R

🌵 BREAKING THIS MORNING: THE GUARDIAN AND NOAA JUST MAPPED THE MOST ALARMING FACT IN THE ENTIRE DATA CENTER STORY — 517 ...
06/10/2026

🌵 BREAKING THIS MORNING: THE GUARDIAN AND NOAA JUST MAPPED THE MOST ALARMING FACT IN THE ENTIRE DATA CENTER STORY — 517 OF THE 809 PLANNED FACILITIES ARE BEING BUILT ON LAND THAT IS ALREADY IN DROUGHT 🌵

This story was published TODAY — June 8, 2026 — just hours ago.

The Guardian. Working with NOAA — the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration. The official government agency that tracks America’s weather and drought conditions. They mapped every single planned data center in the United States. All 809 of them.

And then they overlaid that map with NOAA’s official drought data.

The result is the single most alarming visual in the entire history of the data center crisis. And it proves — with government data, mapped by one of the world’s most respected newspapers — what every community in this series has been experiencing in their wells, their rivers, their reservoirs, and their fields.

Big Tech is deliberately building its water-hungry AI infrastructure in the places that have the least water to spare.

THE NUMBERS THAT WILL BREAK YOUR HEART

About two-thirds of the 809 data centers planned across the U.S. are slated for land that has been in drought over the past year, an analysis from The Guardian found — published today. The research found that 517 data centers are set to be built in areas classified as drought-stricken in the last year, according to NOAA’s National Integrated Drought Information System. 

517 out of 809. That is not a coincidence. That is not bad planning. That is a deliberate industry pattern — and the evidence has now been mapped from official government drought data for everyone to see.

A Bloomberg analysis confirmed the same pattern: more than two-thirds of new data centers built since 2022 are located in water-stressed regions — places where people are already struggling to access clean water. These aren’t isolated sites. Approximately 160 new AI-focused data centers have been built in the U.S. over the past three years — a 70% increase from the previous three-year period. “The problem has only deepened in the years since ChatGPT kicked off an AI frenzy,” Bloomberg reported. 

70% more data centers. In three years. 70% of them in drought zones. While America’s aquifers recede, its rivers run lower, and families in Indiana find their wells have gone dry.

ALABAMA: ONE DATA CENTER WOULD DRINK TWO-THIRDS OF A CITY’S WATER

Here is the story that makes this abstract map suddenly, viscerally real.

In Bessemer, Alabama — a majority-Black community with a median household income well below the national average — community opposition temporarily halted construction of a data center that was projected to require 2 million gallons of water per day. That is roughly enough to supply two-thirds of Bessemer’s entire population. One data center. Two-thirds of a city’s daily water. Gone. 

One building. Consuming enough water for two-thirds of a city. In a community that is already in a drought zone.

And in California — the state most associated with water crises in America:

Roughly 82% of data centers in California are located in communities already suffering from poor air quality — many situated in neighborhoods with particularly high levels of diesel pollution from the backup generators that run the facilities around the clock. 

82%. In California. In communities already choking on diesel exhaust. Being chosen specifically for data center development.

WHY ARE THEY DELIBERATELY CHOOSING DROUGHT ZONES?

This is the question The Guardian investigation answers — and the answer is enraging.

Two-thirds of all data centers built or in development since 2022 are located in water-stressed areas like southern Arizona, the Colorado River Basin, and Texas — the driest, most vulnerable regions in America. The reason is economics: these areas offer cheap land, cheap electricity, and business-friendly regulations that have not yet caught up to the reality of what data center water consumption means at scale for communities already stretched thin. 

Cheap land. Cheap electricity. Weak regulations. That is why they choose drought zones. Not because the water is abundant. Because the laws are weak and the land is cheap and the communities are poor enough that opposition is less organized.

In The Dalles, Oregon — a small town that became a cautionary tale — Google’s water use grew 316% while the town’s population grew just 12%. The math of data center water consumption in small, drought-prone communities is not sustainable. And yet the industry keeps choosing them — because they have the cheapest power and the weakest oversight. 

316%. Google’s water consumption. 12%. The town’s population growth. In Oregon. Which is already dealing with drought. And which was chosen because it had cheap hydroelectric power.

THE COLORADO RIVER IS ALREADY DYING — AND THEY’RE BUILDING MORE DATA CENTERS ON IT

The Colorado River — the lifeline of the American West, serving 40 million people across seven states and providing irrigation for the farms that grow much of America’s food — is already so depleted that Lake Mead and Lake Powell have hit record lows in recent years. And data centers are being built throughout the Colorado River Basin — in Arizona, Nevada, Utah, and Colorado — all drawing on the same water system that is already in crisis. 

40 million people. Seven states. One river. Already dying. And 517 planned data centers are going into the drought zones that include its basin.

The communities that have been fighting these facilities — in Utah, in Arizona, in Nevada — are not being alarmist. They are looking at the same NOAA drought maps that The Guardian published today. And they are saying: there is no water to spare. And the companies building these facilities know it — and are building there anyway, because the regulations haven’t caught up.

AND THE MORATORIUMS ARE SPREADING FASTER THAN EVER

The Guardian report landed this morning and it is already accelerating the national movement.

In just the last two weeks — communities across America have enacted moratoriums at an unprecedented pace: Cedar Hill, Tennessee — two-year moratorium; McMinnville, Tennessee — 18-month moratorium; Ashwaubenon, Wisconsin — 12-month moratorium on hyperscale facilities; Augusta, Georgia — 49-day moratorium to update a 1963 zoning plan; Filer Township, Michigan — one-year precautionary moratorium; Daviess County, Kentucky — one-year moratorium; Merrillville, Indiana — one-year moratorium; Hillsborough, North Carolina — 60-day moratorium. 

Eight communities. In two weeks. From Tennessee to Wisconsin to Georgia to Michigan to Kentucky to Indiana to North Carolina.

And in November 2026 — just five months away:

Voters in California, Michigan, Nevada, and Wisconsin will decide on at least five local ballot measures related to data centers — the first time in American history that data center construction has appeared directly on voter ballots. Americans will be able to vote — directly — on whether data centers should be allowed in their communities. The data center fight has officially entered the ballot box. 

The ballot box. Five measures. Four states. November 2026.

After everything that has happened — the dry wells, the spiked bills, the shell companies, the workers killed, the Indigenous land threatened, the children harmed, the wildlife destroyed, the Nasdaq crash, the grid breaking — Americans are going to vote directly on data centers for the first time in history.

THE BOTTOM LINE

TODAY — June 8, 2026 — The Guardian and NOAA published the map that proves it all.

517 out of 809 planned data centers. Two-thirds. Being built on land that is already in drought. Measured by the official U.S. government weather agency. Mapped by one of the world’s most trusted newspapers.

They are not choosing these locations despite the drought. They are choosing them because of the cheap land and weak regulations that come with communities that haven’t yet figured out what is about to be taken from them.

Bessemer, Alabama. One data center. Two-thirds of a city’s water. Per day.

The Dalles, Oregon. Google’s water use up 316%. The town’s population up 12%.

The Colorado River. 40 million people. Seven states. Being drained from every direction.

517 more planned. In drought zones. Right now. Waiting for permits. Some with shell company names nobody has heard of yet.

But in November — for the first time — Americans in California, Michigan, Nevada, and Wisconsin will get to vote directly on whether to allow them.

And if the story of Festus, Missouri is any guide — if the story of Northern Virginia is any guide — if the story of the thousand people in Utah who chanted “Shame” is any guide:

When Americans actually get to vote on this? They vote no.

Share this TODAY. Share it everywhere. Because the map is out. The data is official. And November is coming. 👇🌵

Follow for more data center updates📰☝️

📌 Source: Tom’s Hardware — “Most new U.S. AI data centers are being built in drought zones — two-thirds of 809 planned projects set for areas with water shortages” (June 8, 2026 — TODAY)

This aired on CNN — Laura Coates Live. And it is the most powerful single television appearance in the entire data cente...
06/10/2026

This aired on CNN — Laura Coates Live. And it is the most powerful single television appearance in the entire data center fight.

Consumer advocate and environmentalist Erin Brockovich joined the fight against AI data centers as communities nationwide raise concerns about secrecy, environmental damage, and quality of life. Brockovich tells Laura Coates that “the size of these places is unbelievable” and says the rapid expansion of the projects across the country is “shocking.” 

The size is unbelievable. The expansion is shocking.

Those are not words from an abstract policy debate. Those are words from the woman who drove to Hinkley, California and looked at what a corporation was doing to a community and decided she was going to do so
mething about it. Who spent years being told she was wrong. Who helped win a $333 million settlement that changed American corporate accountability forever.

She looked at AI data centers — the size of them, the speed of them, the secrecy of them — and said: it is unbelievable. It is shocking.

And then she built a map. And 6,615 Americans filled it with their stories in 30 days.

Here is what Erin Brockovich said on CNN that every American needs to hear:

She called the secrecy surrounding data center approvals the most troubling part of the entire phenomenon. Not the water. Not the electricity. The secrecy. The fact that communities find out after the deal is done. After the NDA is signed. After the permit is approved.

After the bulldozers are already warming up.

She has seen this before. She knows what it looks like when an industry moves fast and in secret and counts on communities not finding out until it is too late.

She is not going to let it happen again.

And this week — with 71% of Americans opposed, with working class communities fighting at five times the rate of wealthy ones, with Kentucky voting out data center supporters, with Blue Island packing a council chamber tonight, with Nashville Zoo’s legal challenge filed today and 332,000 signatures still climbing —

It feels like she has company.

💬 COMMENT: What would YOU say to Erin Brockovich if you could speak to her directly right now? Tell her your story. Tell her your city. Tell her what is happening in YOUR community. Because her map is still accepting reports at BrockovichDataCenter.com.

👍 LIKE if Erin Brockovich is exactly the right person for this fight at exactly the right moment — and you want her to know that 71% of America has her back.

🔁 SHARE this with every person who watched the movie, every person who has been told their community concerns don’t matter, every American who believes that what is happening with data centers is exactly the kind of corporate overreach that needs exactly the kind of fighter that Erin Brockovich has always been.

🔔 FOLLOW this page the stoicway — we cover Erin Brockovich’s data center investigation in real time. Every map update. Every CNN appearance. Every community that gets heard because of what she built.

📌 COMBINED SOURCES FOR ALL 5 ARTICLES:
TechRadar — The Working Class Are Rallying to Oppose Data Centers at 5 Times the Rate of Wealthy Neighborhoods (June 9, 2026)
Gizmodo / Heatmap Pro — Americans Have Grown Dramatically Anti-Data Center in Just Months, Survey Finds (June 3, 2026)
Louisville Public Media — The Fight Over Data Centers Was Front and Center in Local Kentucky Primary Elections (June 8, 2026)
Beverly Review — Data Center Adds Up to Controversy — Blue Island City Council June 9 Meeting (June 9, 2026)
CNN / Laura Coates Live — Erin Brockovich Joins Fight Against AI Data Centers: “It’s Shocking” (May 30, 2026)
Green Matters — Data Centers Are Popping Up All Over the Country, Much to the Disappointment of Many People (June 3, 2026)
Washington Post — Why Most Politicians Are Not Calling for Data Center Bans Despite Voters’ Anger (June 7, 2026)

While much of the world searches for alternatives to traditional plastic, Mexican chemical engineer Sandra Pascoe Ortiz ...
06/09/2026

While much of the world searches for alternatives to traditional plastic, Mexican chemical engineer Sandra Pascoe Ortiz turned to one of Mexico’s most iconic plants: the nopal cactus. 🌵

Using cactus juice combined with natural ingredients such as plant proteins and waxes, Pascoe Ortiz developed a flexible bioplastic designed to break down naturally in the environment far faster than conventional petroleum-based plastics.

Unlike traditional plastic, which can take hundreds of years to decompose, her cactus-based material is reported to be biodegradable and non-toxic. The project was inspired by the need to reduce plastic waste while creating sustainable materials from renewable resources already abundant in Mexico.

🔬🇲🇽 The innovation gained international attention because it combines environmental science with a plant that has deep cultural and historical significance in Mexico. Nopal has been a staple of Mexican cuisine and agriculture for centuries, and now it could play a role in the future of sustainable manufacturing.

Supporters of the project believe innovations like this could help reduce dependence on fossil-fuel-based plastics while opening the door to more eco-friendly packaging and consumer products.

🌎✨ Sandra Pascoe Ortiz’s work is being celebrated as an example of how Mexican innovation and traditional knowledge can come together to create solutions for global environmental challenges.

From a cactus to a potential alternative to plastic, this Mexican invention is showing how local ideas can have a worldwide impact. 🌵🇲🇽♻️

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