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"There's a there's a video there's a video that is circulating online now of the White House where a window is open to the residents upstairs, and somebody is throwing a big bag out the window." "No. That's probably AI generated." "So I actually, you can't open the windows. You know why? They're all heavily, armored and bulletproof." "So that's a fake a fake video?" "And number one, they're sealed. And number two, each window weighs about 600 pounds." "You have to be pretty strong to open them up." "Those windows are sealed. Those windows are all they're all sealed. You can't open them." "It looks like, this is on the Fifteenth Street side."

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The speaker explains that only the fence, garbage can, and air conditioning unit were damaged by the fire, not the house itself. They point out their neighbor's house and their own house, both of which are unaffected. They show a charred cover of their garage door keypad, indicating that it was heavily burned. However, the rest of the building remains untouched.

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Searching every nook and cranny in this build. Here's my last question: How did he get on the roof? Did y'all find a ladder? Does he have, like, a 12 foot vertical? How did this happen?

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As a real estate professional, I always prioritize clean and well-maintained properties. However, our capital is the complete opposite. It is in terrible condition and far from being in top shape.

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It's alarming to see the amount of trash around here, especially along the road I drive my kids to school on. The sight of discarded appliances like fridges and ovens is horrific and unfortunately common. This isn’t an isolated incident; it reflects a broader issue in the area. One notable place, White Duck Taco, which I used to enjoy visiting with my wife, is completely gone. It's frustrating to think about the local community's inability to clean this up with the limited equipment available. Large machinery is necessary to handle the scale of the mess.

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The speaker explains that only the fence, garbage can, and air conditioning unit were damaged by the fire, not the house itself. They point out that their neighbor's house and the other neighbors' houses are also unaffected. They show the charred cover of their garage door keypad, indicating that it was heavily burned, but the rest of the building remains untouched.

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I had no choice but to do it. Despite hating it, everything is now in excellent condition. We had some items that were 40 years old and didn't even work, including the phone wires. But we managed to rebuild everything and did a great job.

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Alright, let's get started. What do we need? Right up to the lift, here. Okay, lift it open. Now, pull both out. Is it on? Yes, it’s on. Pull this one back too, or are you good? You're good for now. Wait for it to pull all the way up. The machinery works well. Should I pull it back again? Yes, pull it out. Looks good. The machinery is impressive; we didn’t even have to use the bat. Sometimes you might need to, though. Overall, the machine works really well. Let’s get some more.

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Oh, would you look at that? There are a few more blemishes on the car. My gosh, just look at it! The car is not perfect. What the heck is that?

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Speaker 0: Thanks for cleaning the gutters. Anything for you, hon. Cleaning the gutters. Yeah. I'm realigning the satellite dish. It's a good one. Hey. It's fixing a leak in the roof. Even better. No. I'm really fixing a leak. I'm good.

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My house is a mess. There's stuff everywhere, even on the windows. It's overwhelming.

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As a real estate professional, I always prioritize clean and well-maintained properties. However, our capital is the complete opposite. It is in terrible condition and far from being in good shape.

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A critique of a brand-new construction home highlights numerous quality issues and defects observed during inspection, suggesting problems throughout both structure and finishes. Structure and framing - Visible solid and other framing elements show signs of improper workmanship; framing bolts are loose and a large gap is present at the balcony area. - Balcony pillars are misaligned and twisted. Measurements vary: about six-and-a-half inches in one area, about seven-and-a-quarter inches in another, and near eight inches in a third location. - Distinct misalignment and poor consistency are noted across multiple structural elements, with camera footage not fully capturing the extent of the distortion. Finishes and surfaces - Windows: “there was once windows there” followed by notes of a sticker crack, implying a poor or incomplete finish around openings. - Exterior and interior painting and finishing are criticized as poor, with references to bad paint work both outside and inside. - A pronounced sloping drywall is observed at the window, indicating installation or framing issues. - A door pin is described as upside down, and another door pin also inverted, signaling hardware installation problems. - A dry sink with poor finish is noted. Moisture and gaps - A quarter-inch gap above the drip cap has been sealed, which is criticized for preventing moisture from wicking and potentially leading to deterioration. Insulation and moisture management - The insulation around areas where it should be tucked in is exposed or poorly installed, with frustration expressed about not tucking it in before securing components. Appliances and fixtures - The dishwasher is described as too short, with the issue “doesn’t matter anyways.” - A dryer vent screen is present where it shouldn’t be, indicating improper installation. Repairs and maintenance - There are multiple “nice repairs” and patches noted, some previously attempted fixes that did not hold (e.g., a crack that resurfaced after an attempt to fix it). Miscellaneous observations - A doorbell works, but other issues persist in the home. - A perception that the same contractor or painter did multiple parts of the job, implying a lack of quality control across the project. - The overall tone emphasizes disappointment with a home advertised as brand new, with repeated references to defects and subpar workmanship. Financial note - The closing line draws attention to the Florida market, stating, “For all you folks that are planning on moving to Florida, just think that was $930,000,” highlighting the cost in relation to the observed quality. In summary, the transcript catalogs a range of construction and finishing defects in a new home, including structural misalignment, improper hardware installation, moisture-control concerns, substandard finishes, inappropriate insulation practices, and questionable repairs, culminating with a remark on the purchase price in Florida.

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As a real estate professional, I always prioritize clean and well-maintained properties. However, our capital is the complete opposite. It is in terrible condition and far from being in good shape.

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Speaker 0: What's interesting too what you're saying about the frequencies over the last fifty years, they've been trying to get rid of lead paint, and the lead paint will not let a lot of those waves go through the walls. Speaker 1: And, yeah, it's interesting because 1970 '1, first cell phone rolls out to the general public. So this is 1971. Speaker 0: The bag phone? Is that the one with the bag or something? Speaker 1: Yes. You get, like, a big mobile phone that they were giving people. Now the military in the book, Zapped, was explaining they already had a cell phone in 1947. Cell have already been here for a long time. That's people who think this stuff is new has been here. So 1947, military cell phone. 1971, general public has a cell phone. 1974 to 1975, you have lead paint being banned. And so if you think about it, when you need to use this technology now that you're now giving to the public and you're gonna now sell them, you need to get rid of the thing that can get the barriers. Speaker 0: Because your phone would not work in a house with lead paint. Yes. Speaker 1: This is why when people buy older homes, they're like, I got no service. So you got the paint, right? Which is blocking one thing. And then you got the pipes, which are copper or lead. So you have a complete Faraday cage. So this is why in today, 2026, so people are aware, this is why the government is out there trying to pay people to get them to get rid of their copper pipes or their lead pipes or whatever else. They had this whole petition where they're paying people to switch them to plastic. Why would you switch them to plastic? So you can get those waves to go in their house, and then you could watch them. And this has been all shown. This is why I have no wireless. I have nothing. I have no Alexa. No Wi Fi.

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Beth, look at this. There are cracks everywhere, even on this pole. It's ridiculous. This is the kind of nonsense we have to deal with when they let them into the country. It's a shame.

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Speaker 0: Look, here. This is the phone. It's not working properly though. Okay. So, the thing is, of course, thank you for the greens. Like this. First, what? How? I don't know, it doesn't show the middle. I'm waiting, these are toilets. I think it's a wooden one. This, this.

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This segment juxtaposes everyday living with the expanding footprint of data centers and the perceived costs of the AI revolution. In the home, Speaker 0 demonstrates a high-pressure cold water line used for storage and filling tanks, noting that the water is needed for flushing toilets. Speaker 1 observes sediment in the water coming from the faucet and asks if that sediment comes from the data center, to which Speaker 0 confirms—“Yeah. And this is what's in all the pipes.” Speaker 2 adds that the well itself is likely “20,000” (units implied) and that this figure doesn’t include costs for replacing fixtures, faucets, toilets, and pipes underneath the house. The cumulative burden feels overwhelming, as Speaker 0 describes feeling up against a “huge wall that you can't penetrate” and a sense that “they don't care.” Turned outward, the report spotlights Meta’s new data center in Mansfield, Georgia: a 2,000,000 square foot facility intended to power AI tools such as ChatGPT and other technologies integrated into daily life. Data centers are described as a hot item and an exciting asset class, with Meta building a two gigawatt-plus data center so large it could cover a significant part of Manhattan. Yet this growth comes with significant costs: light and noise pollution, environmental impacts, and potential rises in energy bills. The facilities exert extraordinary demand on the power grid and require entirely new infrastructure. Speaker 0 voices concern that the burden should be borne by those responsible, not residents. Speaker 2 argues that large tech companies—Meta, Amazon, Microsoft—“can afford to pay for their own generation,” urging people to search their profits. The reporters pursued two central questions in Georgia: “What’s the true cost of the AI revolution, and who should be paying for it?” They note the proximity of a house to the data center—“less than 400 yards.” The profile then introduces Beverly and Jeff Morris, who purchased their home near downtown Atlanta in 2016, with deep roots in the community. Beverly characterizes country living as her peace and therapy, while Jeff notes he was raised about five miles away.

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In a Mansfield, Georgia kitchen, the cold water pressure is shown while water is filled for storage. The transcript describes items used to fill water for flushing toilets and notes visible sediment coming from the water exiting the faucet. It also says the contents found in the pipes reflect sediment likely tied to the well source, stating that just the well itself is probably “twenty thousand,” not counting replacement of fixtures, faucets, toilets, and the lines underneath the house. The homeowner characterizes the situation as overwhelming, saying it feels like “up against this huge wall that you can’t penetrate,” with the impression that “they don’t care,” and that there is “nothing that you can do.” The scene shifts as the narrator drives by Meta’s new two million square foot data center facility in Mansfield, Georgia. The transcript explains that data centers power tools like ChatGPT and other AI tools integrated into daily life, and states that “this entire supercomputer is built to power Grok.” It adds that Meta is building a two gigawatt plus data center large enough to cover a significant part of Manhattan and that data centers are viewed as an exciting asset class. Concerns are raised about the costs of data centers, including light and noise pollution, environmental impacts, potentially rising energy bills, and extraordinary demand on the power grid requiring entirely new infrastructure. The narrator says data centers “should be responsible for that, not us,” and argues that Meta, Amazon, and Microsoft “can afford to pay for their own generation.” The narrator says they came to Georgia to ask two questions: the true cost of the AI revolution, and who should be paying for it. Beverly and Jeff Morris bought their home in 2016, about an hour’s drive from downtown Atlanta, and describe their deep community roots, saying being in the country provides peace and therapy and that they decided the home was “it” and “perfect.” Beverly says she was raised about five miles from the area. The house is described as being less than four hundred yards from the data center.

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Put it up in the fucking scaffolding. I'll make sure I don't know. Yes. Shit. It's warm.

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"That is circulating online now of the White House where a window is open to the residents upstairs and somebody is throwing a big bag out the window." "No. That's probably AI generator." "you can't open the windows. You know why? They're all heavily, armored and bulletproof." "each window weighs about 600 pounds." "It looks like this is on the Fifteenth Street side, I think. Yeah. So right here." "Yeah. Those windows are sealed." "You can't open them." "There are cameras all over the place. Including yours." "I know every window up there." "Renovations."

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Oh my goodness, look at this. It's all on the floor. There must not be enough people to pick all of this up. Look at all of that. Look at all of that.

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When we go undercover, we cover the antiques and the crap. Can you put that back in? Thank you. Do you feel better? Did you guys get sprayed? Here, take this.

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They invested $3,000,000 in a foundation designed to withstand extreme conditions, including a 10.0 earthquake and tsunamis. The foundation is built to remain intact even if the house is destroyed. However, directly in front of this home stands a 100-year-old telephone pole with wires that could fall during a windstorm, posing a fire risk to the house. This highlights a failure in city responsibilities, as they enforce strict requirements on homeowners but neglect their own infrastructure maintenance, including aqueducts and fire safety measures.

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Buddy Webb from Midland, Texas describes a project in front of the Midland Home Depot where they’re digging deep with a shoring device on the west side of the road near the loop. He says he lives behind the store and wants to show map screens he saved, comparing “before” and “after” images of live trees being removed. He references Google Earth time-stamped screenshots to illustrate changes from 2008 (before he moved here) to 2009, noting a suspected tunnel entrance in a neighbor’s backyard that wasn’t there in 2008 but is in 2009. He mentions that during this period the previous homeowner died and raises a question about a potential connection, alleging the previous homeowner, Mike Lawhan, was murdered and taken to Fort Worth the week before underground activity started in the backyard. Webb shares that after he was shot in 2012, and in 2014, the suspected tunnel entrance remained there. He began posting pictures online, after which the live tree behind the home was removed along with the tunnel-related infrastructure. He claims the area behind Home Depot and between the house and the store housed a live tree that was removed, and that a tunnel may connect to his backyard underground home. He plans to show more photos to support this. He presents an oldest city map showing his house and backyard, where the underground home is believed to be. He points to what looks like a ditch near the backyard, a line projecting toward a telephone pole (the live tree), and two side-by-side manholes. He notes buried concrete blocks at the corner of his house that align with the suspected tunnel entrance in the neighbor’s yard. Webb discusses images where the tunnel entrance is still open in the backyard, and where a line of concrete blocks and possible dirt lines appear. He refers to a 2012 map and a 2014 image showing the area behind the Home Depot wall, the two manholes, and the missing tree. He claims the back fence was removed, two dump-trucks of dirt were dumped in a neighbor’s yard, and that footage of this was censored when he posted it. He shows another old map indicating work across the street from Home Depot, with a line of dirt and a pile of dirt in the neighbor’s yard, suggesting tunneling and dirt management during construction. He notes a beam map showing the area near the backyard, a possible dog trail, and the line of the tunnel’s path toward his home. Webb also references a parking lot he believes was used for gatherings related to “oil show parties,” with trucks parking behind Home Depot and Target, suggesting sex trafficking activity tied to the tunnels. He asserts that truckers would arrive late at night, meet with participants, and leave, and claims that after he got views on his videos, the activity diminished and concrete was poured, after which Conaway (a former U.S. congressman) retired a week later. He mentions the Conaway family and their ties to houses on the cul-de-sac, asking whether tunnels connected these homes. Finally, he summarizes a ditch map showing a tunnel from a home near Center Road of the Home Depot, across the street to his house, with concrete indicators and multiple underground homes—three he believes are in the area—and concludes with a focus on the construction activity and the ongoing digging near the Home Depot.
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