With the AI race in full swing, America must face one of its biggest obstacles if we’re going to beat adversaries like China: our current power grid, which hasn’t been updated since FDR, is not sustainable.
We need 99% power by 2027. We’re at 3%.
Of all energy usage, in the next three years, an additional 29 gigawatts will be needed by 2027, and 67 more gigawatts will be required by 2030.
Glenn Beck argues that this can only be done by building nuclear power plants. China is already ahead of us in power plant production, so we need to get the ball rolling: “This is something that Donald Trump could do,” says Beck. “And it is time!”
Want to know how the elites’ playbook works? Take a look at Three Mile Island. For decades, the media used Three Mile Island, the site of the worst commercial nuclear accident in US history, as the poster child for why we CAN’T invest in nuclear energy (even though the incident resulted in ZERO deaths).
But now that Bill Gates needs more power for Microsoft’s data processing centers and AI programs, the media is once again rejoicing over nuclear energy!
Glenn Beck explains how this tells us all we need to know about how the elites work: They’ll use propaganda and lies to stop average Americans from having nuclear energy, but as soon as THEY need it, they’ll reverse course.
This week on the New World Next Week: the United Nations admits geoengineering and proposes that they should regulate it; the latest Iran nuke hysteria is a giant nothing burger; and there is more to the new anti-CBDC bill in US congress than meets the eye. More from The Corbett Report and Media Monarchy.
ACLJ Senior Counsel for Global Affairs Mike Pompeo joins host Jordan Sekulow to break down the current energy crisis Europe is facing and how America may be headed on the same path.
Pompeo says Europe walked away from nuclear power, walked away from coal power and found they had no solution for affordable energy. Is America next? Here’s the story.
NASA’s Mars lander InSight is ending operation on the Red Planet due to lack of power. The rover apparently accumulated a significant amount of lunar dust on its solar panels, interfering with its mobility.
NASA expects InSight to stop responding later this year. Good news is the Curiosity and Perseverance rovers are going strong, thanks to nuclear power. Here’s more from Newsy.