

It Could Happen Here Weekly 195
Aug 16, 2025
Robert Evans, a speaker on societal collapse, and Carl Casada, an environmental activist, dive into critical topics of activism against corporate environmental destruction. They discuss Tucson's successful grassroots resistance to a harmful data center, highlighting community resilience. The conversation also touches on Project Blue, emphasizing the importance of collective actions in combating ecological threats. Additionally, they explore the intersection of infrastructure control and environmental justice, challenging listeners to consider their role in community advocacy.
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Infrastructure As A Tool Of Control
- Physical infrastructure (roads, zoning, transit) is designed to control movement and consolidate state and corporate power.
- Colonial and extractive projects historically prioritize resource flow to the center, not local mobility or wellbeing.
Cycling Rwanda: Roads Tell A Story
- James Stout recounts cycling in Rwanda and noticing 'Chinese roads' built to serve mines rather than local life.
- He contrasts immersive dirt-road travel with sterile extractive highways that speed resource exportation.
The Internet Is Physical And Political
- Digital infrastructure (undersea cables, data centers, cloud providers) physically shapes access and surveillance like roads do.
- A few corporations and governments jointly centralize control, enabling censorship and soft suppression globally.