Data Centers Encourage End-of-Days Technology
- matt47639
- Dec 1, 2025
- 3 min read
Updated: Dec 15, 2025

In my last talk, I mentioned how destroying our beautiful landscape disconnects from God. I gave biblical context on how removing our conduit to God, via nature and beauty, takes us farther away from Genesis and closer to Revelation.
In Rev 13 it says that our ability to buy and sell can be turned off. Likely from a large digital monitoring system that tracks our every move and every purchase. We will need big data centers for that.
In that same chapter of Revelation, the false prophet creates an image or a statue and gives it life. The ability to move. The ability to think. Sounds a lot like a robot with artificial intelligence. We will need big data centers for that.
And in Daniel Chapter 2. Daniel talks of a final kingdom to rule the earth made of iron and clay. Clay always represents man or Adam, formed from the dust of the earth. And I believe iron represents machine, or technology, because if you read on, it says that the iron will not mix with the clay.
You see, just because something is technological, does not mean it is not also spiritual. There will be spiritual consequences for removing beauty and implementing technology. The two are diametrically opposed. Beauty is a conduit for God, while technology is a conduit for evil. It is the foundation needed to implement a world wide digital monitoring system where computer programs get to decide if we can buy food, if we can use our car, if we can vote.
So my question is, are we are Christian community? Are we a Christian county? If we are, and if these interpretations of Daniel and Revelation cannot be easily discounted, then we should heed their warnings and resist this technology on principal, on a moral standing.
Now, seeing as we pray to Jesus before our Commissioner’s Court begins, my contention is that we are a Christian County, and that these interpretations cannot be easily discounted, thus we should resist on principal, and on moral standing. Thus, it doesn’t matter how quiet they are, it doesn’t matter if we can’t see them, it doesn’t matter what you can negotiate in tax breaks, we do not want them.
And according to subchapter K of the Texas Local Government Code, we do not have to have them.
The following is direct quote from subchapter K, and if you go to RejectBigTech.com we have the whole subchapter highlighted.
But it says:
“orderly development of the watershed (defined as all of hood county) is of concern to the entire state; without adequate development regulations, the watershed will be developed in ways that interfere with the proper use of that area as a place of recreation
So all of Hood County is defined as a place of recreation, not an industrial data hub. Those two seem like opposites to me.
It says that interfering with that would be to the detriment of the public health, safety, morals, and general welfare. Somebody was wise here. Somebody was looking into the future. Perhaps God gave us this provision to protect his land. We all know this is God’s Country.
It then lists a number of things this Commissioner’s Court can do to regulate these data centers out of feasibility. Done
We don’t even have to make a controversial decision. Since not a single resident wants them.
We just need our commissioners to listen to the residents of Hood County repeatedly saying, we do not want data centers here. They are a detriment to our public health, safety, morals, and general welfare as defined in subchapter K of the Texas Local Government Code.
And as Christian, I do not believe we should be prioritizing end of days technology over beaty, nature and living souls.
Thank you



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