• cecilkorik@piefed.ca
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        2 days ago

        “Hey, Bill, that new intern you hired? Yeah send him to the police station right away, I’ve got a new job title for him.”

        “Alright officer, let me introduce you to our Executive Vice President of Environmental Operations, uhhh, what did you say his name was again?”

      • Sanctus@anarchist.nexus
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        4 days ago

        Well the next part of the plan was to beat whoever comes out to check on it with a baseball bat so

        • Madison420@lemmy.world
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          2 days ago

          I mean if you want it to stay that’s a great way to accomplish that. Cities and states protect businesses, it’s what they do. What you need to do is create a public nuisance in bringing light and thus exposure to it. Damaging it or slowing business will not win you at friends with the government and in fact they may call it legal just to spite you.

            • Madison420@lemmy.world
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              2 days ago

              Well first you don’t make comments and second you stop it upstream so you don’t cause a catastrophe for no particular reason and become the bad guy yourself.

              • Sanctus@anarchist.nexus
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                2 days ago

                Do you think that by clogging data center pipes the community would somehow be harmed? Or by beating OpenAI employees with baseball bats we’d somehow harm the community? You’re angle seems to be violence = bad when we have only ever earned human rights through violence.

                • Madison420@lemmy.world
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                  2 days ago

                  I think it’s likely that it causes power blackouts effecting the community and potentially ecological disasters could happen, we don’t know.

                  No I’m saying shut it down at the source and don’t Babe Ruth your felonies.

      • FiniteBanjo@feddit.online
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        2 days ago

        No, it really isn’t. In fact, leaving in place an uncontrolled and unpermitted immediate risk to human health and safety would be negligence. It may very well be more illegal to do nothing about the pipe.

            • Madison420@lemmy.world
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              2 days ago

              Doesn’t matter. You can’t just block a pipe downstream even if it’s illegal. I know it sounds stupid but there’s a chance blocking it causes a much much larger disaster upstream of the plug.

              • FiniteBanjo@feddit.online
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                2 days ago

                It matters a lot, you cannot just allow illegal pollution which poses immediate harm to human life and the environment. If the pipe were installed correctly then it will backflow in the factory, but if you’re that worried you can feel free to contact the company and tell them that the drainage pipe has been sealed.

                • Madison420@lemmy.world
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                  2 days ago

                  There’s a difference between stopping something and recklessly interfering. Destruction of property doesn’t actually care if the pipe is there legally nor does industrial sabotage. You’re committing the arrestable offense not them unfortunately.

  • BarqsHasBite@lemmy.world
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    3 days ago

    What happened next, across the four months that followed,

    The Texas Commission on Environmental Quality, the state environmental regulator known as TCEQ, had quietly issued Tesla a wastewater discharge permit on January 15, 2025. The permit, a Texas Pollutant Discharge Elimination System authorization known as TPDES, allowed up to 231,000 gallons of treated wastewater per day to be discharged into an unnamed ditch that flows into Petronila Creek and from there into Baffin Bay, a longtime South Texas saltwater fishing destination.

    The drainage district that manages the ditch the pipe was discharging into was never notified that the permit existed. Its workers found out the way drainage district workers in any small Texas county find out about things: by walking the ditch and seeing something new.

    …heavy metals were not tested because they had not been part of the original complaint the district filed

    …the drainage district had already hired its own attorney and commissioned its own independent test.

    Gonna skip the results for length, see article.

    The cease-and-desist letter has not yet been answered. TCEQ has not reopened its investigation. Tesla is still operating the plant. The pipe is still discharging. None of this is illegal as currently constituted, because the permit that was written does not require monitoring for the things the independent lab found.

    • ZDL@lazysoci.al
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      3 days ago

      Wouldn’t it be a shame if some miscreantsheroes from impacted communities connected a high pressure concrete pump into the pipe and filled it with fast-curing concrete?