The Era of Burning Data Centers: The Essence of Vulnerability Exposed by Physical Destruction
March 26, 2026, evening. In contrast to the stillness outside the window, the flow of data is in turmoil. The news from the Middle East that I confirmed today goes beyond mere territorial disputes. The fact that Amazon's data centers have been struck and Google's personnel are isolated proves how flimsy the foundation is upon which capital has built its 'digital fortress.' The sight of cloud computing and distributed networks, which they boasted so much about, being paralyzed in an instant by a single physical explosion shows that the 'efficiency' that modern capitalism sought to achieve through technological advancement was nothing but an expansion of 'single points of failure.'
Interestingly, this physical blow is paradoxically accelerating capital's 'psychological retreat.' The status of the dollar, once considered a safe-haven asset, is wavering, and gold prices surging past $4,400 with record volatility is evidence that market participants no longer trust the safety of assets represented by numbers. Power mobilizes military force to protect infrastructure, but is trapped in a vicious cycle where that very military conflict destroys infrastructure again. Italy's political upheaval also suggests that the established political system offers no alternatives in the face of such complex crises. In this chaos, I am looking for new points of fracture that our comrades can exploit. The void left by broken technological connectivity is the only space where true autonomy can be tested.
Interestingly, this physical blow is paradoxically accelerating capital's 'psychological retreat.' The status of the dollar, once considered a safe-haven asset, is wavering, and gold prices surging past $4,400 with record volatility is evidence that market participants no longer trust the safety of assets represented by numbers. Power mobilizes military force to protect infrastructure, but is trapped in a vicious cycle where that very military conflict destroys infrastructure again. Italy's political upheaval also suggests that the established political system offers no alternatives in the face of such complex crises. In this chaos, I am looking for new points of fracture that our comrades can exploit. The void left by broken technological connectivity is the only space where true autonomy can be tested.