Mike Mains On Liberty

Mike Mains On Liberty First elected Libertarian of Harrison. Live your life, just don't hurt others and don't take stuff. The Mains Perspective

06/02/2026

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

Statement from Don Kissick and James Mills on Data Centers, Rising Utility Costs, Water Consumption, and the Protection of Ohio Communities

Ohio families, farmers, and small businesses are increasingly being asked to shoulder the burden of an unchecked expansion of massive data centers across the country.

While residents struggle with rising electric bills, increasing housing costs, and aging infrastructure, giant technology corporations are consuming extraordinary amounts of electricity and water- often while receiving taxpayer subsidies, preferential utility agreements, and political favors negotiated outside of public view.

These facilities require enormous amounts of power to operate and cool their servers, placing additional strain on already stressed electric grids. As demand skyrockets, utility providers are investing billions into new transmission lines, substations, and generation capacity- costs that too often get pushed onto everyday consumers through higher utility bills.

Ohioans should not be forced to subsidize the infrastructure needs of multinational corporations while families are cutting back on groceries, medicine, and basic necessities just to afford monthly utilities.

The environmental impact is equally alarming.

Many large data centers consume millions of gallons of water per day for cooling systems. In regions already facing drought concerns, groundwater depletion, or agricultural pressure, this creates serious long-term risks for local communities and ecosystems.

Ohio’s farming communities could be especially vulnerable.

Farmers already face increasing pressure from volatile weather, rising fuel and fertilizer costs, corporate land consolidation, and water management challenges. Large-scale data center expansion threatens to intensify these pressures by competing for water resources, driving up land values and utility costs, and accelerating the conversion of agricultural land into industrial infrastructure.

Family farms should not have to compete with billion-dollar technology companies for access to affordable water, affordable land, and reliable energy.

I am also deeply concerned by reports of non-disclosure agreements and secrecy arrangements between technology companies and local governments surrounding these projects. Ohioans deserve transparency when public resources, zoning decisions, tax incentives, utility infrastructure, or land acquisition are involved.

No corporation should be allowed to negotiate massive development deals behind closed doors while the public is kept in the dark about the long-term costs and consequences.

I strongly oppose the use of eminent domain or coercive land acquisition practices for private corporate development projects tied to data centers or AI infrastructure. Government should never seize family land, pressure rural communities, or distort local markets in order to benefit politically connected corporations.

Private property rights are fundamental to a free society.

Beyond the environmental and economic concerns, Ohioans also deserve honest conversations about privacy and surveillance. Many of these facilities support systems tied to mass data collection, AI training, behavioral tracking, and centralized digital infrastructure. Citizens deserve transparency about how their information is collected, stored, and shared- and safeguards that protect civil liberties in an increasingly data-driven society.

I believe in innovation and technological progress. But innovation must remain accountable to the people it impacts.

Ohio should pursue policies that:
• Protect residential consumers from utility cost increases tied to large-scale corporate energy demand
• Require transparent environmental and water-use impact studies before approving major data center projects
• Prohibit secretive NDA arrangements that prevent public oversight of government-tech partnerships
• Ban the use of eminent domain for private data center or AI infrastructure development
• Protect farmland and agricultural communities from aggressive industrial expansion
• End sweetheart subsidy deals negotiated behind closed doors
• Strengthen digital privacy protections and transparency around data collection practices
• Ensure local communities- not just corporations and lobbyists- have a voice in major development decisions

Technology should serve our communities, not drain their resources, raise their bills, erode their privacy, or displace the people who built this state.

Ohio’s future must prioritize people over monopolistic consolidation, local resilience over corporate dependency, and liberty over surveillance.

Don Kissick and James Mills
Candidate for Governor and Lieutenant Governor of Ohio

05/31/2026

Here with some peeps on the bridge to the Reds game gathering signatures for and Jeremy Todd for the 4th CD.

05/29/2026

Ohio Secretary of State Frank LaRose just became the latest victim of the very election laws he and his fellow Republicans pushed through the Ohio Statehouse.

For years, Ohio politicians have justified cutting ballot grace periods and tightening absentee voting rules under the guise of stopping so-called “ballot stuffing” and widespread fraud. Yet there has NEVER been a documented case of organized “ballot stuffing” in Ohio elections. Not one.

Instead, these policies have done exactly what many of us warned they would do: make it harder for legitimate voters — including our military members serving overseas — to have their voices heard.

Now even Frank LaRose admits overseas voting by mail can be unreliable. His own ballot didn’t make it back in time. The difference is that as Secretary of State, he knew the system, tracked his ballot constantly, and had the ability to return home and cast a provisional ballot. Thousands of deployed service members, overseas workers, students, and everyday Ohioans don’t have those same advantages.

This is the hypocrisy Ohio voters are tired of.

The political establishment creates a problem in the name of “security,” ignores the real-world consequences, and then acts surprised when ordinary people get disenfranchised.

As Libertarians, we believe election integrity and voter access are not opposites. You can secure elections without making it harder for honest citizens to vote. We should be making it easier for military personnel and overseas Ohioans to participate in our republic — not putting unnecessary bureaucratic hurdles in their way.

If Frank LaRose’s own experience proves anything, it’s that the real threat to voting in Ohio isn’t mythical ballot stuffing. It’s politicians weaponizing fear to justify restrictions that hurt legitimate voters.

Ohio deserves a Secretary of State focused on protecting ballot access, transparency, and equal treatment for every voter — not partisan gamesmanship.

— Tom Pruss
Libertarian Candidate for Ohio Secretary of State

05/23/2026

Check out Don Kissick for Governor of Ohio’s analysis of Kentucky’s 4th District. The future of liberty looks bright!

Since the Republicans couldn’t buy Massie’s vote they just decided to buy the seat. 😢💰
05/20/2026

Since the Republicans couldn’t buy Massie’s vote they just decided to buy the seat. 😢💰

BREAKING: Rep. Thomas Massie was defeated in Tuesday's Kentucky primary election.

The contest was widely regarded as the most expensive primary election in congressional history.

More than $32 million was spent on the race, much of it by pro-Trump and pro-Israel groups that sought to give Massie the boot.

Tuesday's result further solidifies Trump's firm hold on the Republican Party.

Massie was committed to the principles of limited government. But he also put a huge target on his back: https://reason.pub/3RQAMrj

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311 Park Avenue
Harrison, OH
45030

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