DNYUZ
No Result
View All Result
DNYUZ
No Result
View All Result
DNYUZ
Home News

You’ll Never Guess Trade Unions’ Position on AI Data Centers

May 7, 2026
in News
You’ll Never Guess Trade Unions’ Position on AI Data Centers

Trade unions have a centuries-long history of squaring up against the might of industrial capitalists to fight for rights that workers now often take for granted, from the eight-hour work day to the federal minimum wage to workplace safety laws.

If you were to imagine how unions are responding to the tech industry’s massive push to build AI data centers across the country — an issue that’s currently uniting the grassroots left and right to an almost unprecedented degree in opposition — you might reasonably assume they’re staunch foes of the projects.

But in the topsy-turvy world of AI, where alliances often seem to contradict traditional political categorization, you’d be dead wrong. Instead, unions are playing a pivotal role in the tech industry’s push to ram data centers through local opposition. According to the Associated Press, they’ve become a publicly visible force alongside pro-business Republicans and big tech corporations — two famously anti-labor cohorts, ironically.

The core factor underscoring this contradictory stance is construction employment. When data center developers approach communities in search of land to erect their computational complexes, one of the main carrots they wave around are jobs, both temporary construction labor and permanent full-time labor.

At this point, we know that data centers aren’t a major source for quality, full-time jobs after they’re built. They do require tons of contract construction gigs, however, which generates short-term work for building trades workers, and growth for their craft unions.

“When people say, you know, ‘data centers are the root of all evil,’ we’re just saying, ‘look, they do create a hell of a lot of construction jobs, which we live and work in your communities,’” president of the Pennsylvania Building and Construction Trades Council Rob Bair told the AP.

In effect, these unions are abandoning their communities in favor of narrow self-interest — prioritizing immediate, short-term gains while ignoring the material harm data centers inflict on their communities.

It’s not a new phenomenon, but one which has become increasingly common as trade unions have been defanged. For example, the AFL-CIO, the largest federation of trade unions in the US, infamously supported the US war on Vietnam for its stimulating effect on industry, siding with conservative and military industrial complex forces over the progressive anti-war movement.

The real tragedy here isn’t that unions have forgotten how to fight — but that increasingly, they seem to have forgotten who it is they’re fighting for in the first place.

More on data centers: A Tiny Town Is Building So Many Data Centers That There’ll Be Almost Nothing Else Left

The post You’ll Never Guess Trade Unions’ Position on AI Data Centers appeared first on Futurism.

Jury sides with LAPD in lawsuit over shooting that killed girl at Burlington coat store
News

Jury sides with LAPD in lawsuit over shooting that killed girl at Burlington coat store

by Los Angeles Times
May 7, 2026

After deliberating for a little over a day, a Los Angeles County jury found that an LAPD officer was not ...

Read more
News

Olivia Rodrigo ‘Unraveled Tour’ tickets are on sale. What do they cost?

May 7, 2026
News

Two Americas, one drive-thru: Welcome to fast food’s contradictory, split-screen economy

May 7, 2026
News

GameStop CEO says he was ‘permanently suspended’ from eBay — but his listings are still up, including $14,000 socks

May 7, 2026
News

Kodak Black arrested on suspicion of trafficking MDMA in Florida

May 7, 2026
There Are Microplastics In the Air, How Worried Should You Be?

There Are Microplastics In the Air, How Worried Should You Be?

May 7, 2026
A Series That Traveled Through Time: Starz Networks President Says Goodbye to ‘Outlander’ | Guest Column

A Series That Traveled Through Time: Starz Networks President Says Goodbye to ‘Outlander’ | Guest Column

May 7, 2026
Stripe CEO Patrick Collison says a wave of token theft is wreaking havoc on the AI economy

Stripe CEO Patrick Collison says a wave of token theft is wreaking havoc on the AI economy

May 7, 2026

DNYUZ © 2026

No Result
View All Result

DNYUZ © 2026