Tag Archives: power

The Curious Case of Rosemary Kennedy: A Life Stolen by a Lobotomy

When people think of the Kennedy family, they picture American royalty — charm, power, tragedy, and influence. But hidden in the family’s glittering history is the heartbreaking story of Rosemary Kennedy, a woman whose life was forever altered by an inhumane medical procedure: the lobotomy.

Her story is not just about a single act of cruelty; it’s a cautionary tale about how women — even those born into wealth and privilege — were silenced and controlled when they didn’t fit the mold.


Who Was Rosemary Kennedy?

Born in 1918, Rosemary was the eldest daughter of Joseph P. Kennedy Sr. and Rose Fitzgerald Kennedy. Unlike her famous siblings — John F. Kennedy, Robert Kennedy, and Ted Kennedy — Rosemary struggled with developmental delays and learning difficulties.

Despite this, those who knew her described her as bubbly, affectionate, and eager to please. She loved children and dreamed of becoming a kindergarten teacher. Friends recalled her as someone who loved to dance and laugh, often the heart of social gatherings in her youth.

Yet, in a family obsessed with perfection, her uniqueness was seen not as a gift, but as a liability.


The Kennedy Family’s Dilemma

By her late teens and early twenties, Rosemary’s challenges became harder for her family to manage. Reports say she had mood swings and occasional outbursts. At the time, such behavior — especially in women — was stigmatized as “unladylike” or “dangerous.”

Joseph Kennedy Sr., deeply concerned about the family’s public image (and perhaps his sons’ political futures), sought what doctors claimed would be a revolutionary procedure: the prefrontal lobotomy.


The Lobotomy: An Inhumane “Solution”

In 1941, at age 23, Rosemary underwent the procedure. Accounts describe how doctors inserted sharp instruments through her skull to sever connections in her brain’s frontal lobe. During the surgery, she was asked to recite the alphabet and sing songs — until she could no longer continue. That was considered the point of “success.”

But the outcome was devastating. Rosemary was left unable to walk, speak coherently, or care for herself. Once a vibrant young woman, she became dependent on lifelong institutional care, hidden away from the public eye.


What People Said About Her Personality Before

  • Friends and relatives remembered Rosemary as “sweet and shy, with a loving smile.”
  • Journal entries and letters showed she longed to be included in her siblings’ lives, writing of parties, dresses, and dances.
  • She reportedly adored children and worked briefly as a teaching assistant at a school for girls, where she thrived in the role.

Her personality was not one of danger or threat — but of longing for belonging.


Why They Did It

The lobotomy craze of the 1930s–1950s was sold as a miracle cure for everything from depression to “rebellious behavior.” But in Rosemary’s case, historians argue it was not about medicine — it was about control.

  • Gender norms of the time: A woman’s independence or sexuality was often pathologized.
  • Family image: Joseph Kennedy Sr. feared scandal or anything that could jeopardize his children’s political ambitions.
  • Medical hubris: Surgeons like Dr. Walter Freeman promoted lobotomies as quick fixes, despite their horrifying risks.

In truth, Rosemary’s “treatment” was less about her well-being and more about preserving appearances.


Aftermath: A Life in the Shadows

Following the operation, Rosemary was institutionalized for the rest of her life. For decades, the Kennedys kept her existence quiet. Only later did the truth emerge, shining light on the darker side of both psychiatry and patriarchal family control.

Though her siblings rarely spoke of her publicly, her story eventually inspired Eunice Kennedy Shriver, her sister, to found the Special Olympics in 1968 — a movement that honored Rosemary’s spirit and advocated for inclusion.


Why Rosemary’s Story Still Matters

Rosemary Kennedy’s life is a stark reminder of how far society has come — and how fragile progress can be.

  • It shows the dangers of stigmatizing difference.
  • It exposes how medicine has been used as a tool of control.
  • And it calls us to recognize the humanity of those who don’t conform to narrow definitions of “normal.”

Her story helps us remember that every person deserves dignity, voice, and choice.


Disclaimer

This article is intended for educational and informational purposes only. It is not meant to provide medical, psychiatric, or legal advice. The historical examples and case studies referenced are based on documented sources, public records, and published works. Readers are encouraged to explore the suggested resources for further study. Any opinions expressed are those of the author and are not a substitute for professional advice.


References & Resources

  • El-Hai, Jack. The Lobotomist: A Maverick Medical Genius and His Tragic Quest to Rid the World of Mental Illness. Wiley, 2005.
  • Larson, Edward J. A Flame of Pure Fire: Jack Dempsey and the Roaring ’20s. (Context on the Kennedy era and social expectations.)
  • Dully, Howard, and Charles Fleming. My Lobotomy: A Memoir. Crown, 2007.
  • Scull, Andrew. Madness in Civilization: A Cultural History of Insanity. Princeton University Press, 2015.
  • Primary accounts and Kennedy family biographies archived at the John F. Kennedy Presidential Library.

About the Author

A.L. Childers (Audrey Childers) is a writer, researcher, and storyteller whose works uncover hidden histories and challenge accepted narratives. Raised in the South, she combines personal experience with in-depth research to shed light on the forgotten, the silenced, and the misunderstood.

Her latest book, The Hidden Empire: A Journey Through Millennia of Oligarchic Rule, explores how power structures have shaped society throughout history — and how those echoes still affect us today.

Author’s Note

As an author, I approach true survival stories with both reverence and responsibility. When I write about real people who have endured trauma, I don’t just collect facts — I live their lives on the page as I read and research. I feel their fear, their courage, and their resilience.

That’s what makes me different from other authors: I don’t treat survivor stories as headlines. I write with compassion, dignity, and a trauma-informed lens, making sure their humanity is honored above all else.

I believe in ethical storytelling — sharing true stories responsibly, with sensitivity and integrity, so readers can understand both the tragedy and the triumph without exploitation. My goal is to protect survivors while reminding readers that behind every survival miracle is a human being with a beating heart and a story worth respecting.


🔑 SEO Keywords naturally included: ethical storytelling, trauma-informed writing, survivor stories told with dignity, storytelling with compassion and integrity.

America’s Data-Center Boom: Where They Are, Who Pays—and Who Profits

From social media feeds and cloud backups to AI assistants, our “cloud” lives on the ground—inside thousands of water-hungry, power-intensive data centers. The U.S. now hosts by far the most data centers in the world—over 5,300, roughly 45% of the global total—far ahead of Germany and the UK. StatistaVisual CapitalistBrightlio – Technology Iluminated

As this build-out accelerates for AI, electricity demand is spiking, communities report higher utility bills, and local water supplies are strained—especially in arid regions. U.S. data centers used about 4.4% of national electricity in 2023 and could reach 6.7–12% by 2028, according to the Department of Energy and the IEA. The Department of Energy’s Energy.govIEA+1


Where the Big U.S. Data-Center Hubs Are (and who’s building)

Northern Virginia (Loudoun & Prince William Counties)

  • The world’s largest cluster—often called “Data Center Alley.” Loudoun County alone counts 25+ million sq ft in operation. Loudoun County Economic Development, VA
  • Expansion fights have intensified. In Aug. 2025, a Virginia judge voided the rezoning approval for the Prince William Digital Gateway—planned for 37 centers on ~1,700–2,000 acres—over notice defects, after years of resident pushback over noise, visuals, water, and power. The Washington Post
  • Industry political spending surged as the state weighed new rules; only 1 of 27 bills passed in 2025. Business Insider

Phoenix / Mesa, Arizona

  • A top-tier market in the desert; utilities and cities are now scrutinizing water as AI growth accelerates. CBREBusiness Insider

Dallas–Fort Worth, Texas

  • Construction underway could double the market’s size by 2026. CBRE

Columbus / New Albany, Ohio

Oregon (The Dalles; Hillsboro)

  • Google’s The Dalles: after a 13-month legal fight, the city agreed to disclose water usage records—a flashpoint for transparency around cooling-water withdrawals. Reporters CommitteeCourthouse News

Washington (Quincy)

  • Microsoft operates a massive campus; diesel backup generators and air permits have long been contested due to particulate pollution during testing/outages. State Ecology required health-risk assessments of diesel emissions. Washington State Department of EcologyEcology AppsWIRED

Utah (Eagle Mountain)

Tennessee (Gallatin, near Nashville)

  • Meta opened a large facility; AP/WPLN chronicled how residents near new suburban data centers worry about water demand, diesel emissions, and proximity to homes/schools as projects and new substations push into neighborhoods. WPLN News

South Carolina (Moncks Corner / Berkeley & Dorchester Counties)

  • Google has multiple sites; conservation groups have pressed for water-use disclosure and limits on new groundwater withdrawals. The county acknowledges Google will report annual site-level water usage going forward. Coastal Conservation LeagueDorchester County

North Carolina (Maiden / Lenoir region)

  • Apple’s Maiden data center helped pioneer on-site solar, biogas fuel cells, and a pivot to renewables—but debates continue over grid mix vs. corporate certificates. AppleData Center KnowledgeWIRED+1

Big picture: Primary U.S. markets—Northern Virginia, Phoenix, Dallas, Chicago, Atlanta, Silicon Valley, Columbus—are still expanding, with record-low vacancies and 70% more capacity under construction in 2024 vs. 2023. CBREReuters


What nearby residents report—and what the data shows

1) Higher utility bills & grid stress

  • Utilities are inundated by massive interconnection requests; even projects that never get built can drive expensive upgrades—costs often socialized to ratepayers. The Wall Street Journal
  • In Northern Virginia, >25% of all power already went to data centers in 2023; could reach ~46% by 2030, AP reported (via WPLN). WPLN News

2) Water withdrawals & rate hikes

  • Large centers can use up to ~5 million gallons per day for cooling—comparable to a town of ~50,000 people. AP News
  • Investigations show 40% of U.S. data centers are in high/very-high water-scarcity regions; several Southwest markets tightened rules as AI builds out. Business Insider
  • In Newton County, GA (Meta), local leaders warned of a water deficit by 2030 and 33% residential water-rate increases, according to coverage summarizing water-authority reports and interviews. sjdsGovTech

3) Air & noise pollution

4) Land use, heritage, and property values

  • The now-voided Prince William Digital Gateway plan would have industrialized land by Manassas National Battlefield Park, amplifying concerns over cultural resources and neighborhood character. The Washington Post

5) Jobs: fewer than promised?

  • Even giant facilities often employ fewer than 100 long-term staff; backers cite construction trades and tax rolls as benefits, while residents question trade-offs. WPLN News

Health, Equity, and Environmental Justice

  • Water stress and air pollution hit hardest in lower-income communities near industrial zones. AP and IEA warn that AI-driven build-out will double global data-center electricity demand by 2030, intensifying local burdens unless mitigations scale. IEAS&P Global
  • NAACP and local groups call for transparency, community-benefit agreements, and siting away from homes/schools. (Virginia’s 2025 session showcased the industry’s influence, even as local opposition grows.) Business Insider

Lessons from Tennessee: Land Taken, Health Broken—What’s real?

In practice, most data-center land is acquired via rezoning and private sales, not eminent domain. Still, neighbors describe feeling “forced out” by encroaching industrial uses, substation siting, and round-the-clock noise—especially in Northern Virginia and suburban Nashville. AP/WPLN’s reporting captures how quickly these projects move into neighborhoods, bringing air/noise issues and substation build-outs that alter daily life. WPLN News


Not all news is bad: mitigation that actually helps

  • Water reuse and air cooling: Quincy, WA and Eagle Mountain, UT now recycle process water for parks/industry, cutting potable demand. US EPAMicrosoft LocalEagle Mountain City
  • Transparency wins: The Dalles, OR ended secrecy over Google’s water data—public records will be released going forward. Reporters Committee
  • Planning: CBRE/Cushman data show more projects steering to grids with capacity (e.g., Dallas, Columbus) and adding on-site renewables/efficiency—though demand still outpaces supply. CBREReuters

Quick directory: Major operators & flagship U.S. sites

  • Meta — Gallatin, TN; Eagle Mountain, UT; New Albany, OH; Forest City/Prineville, OR (historical Facebook origin); expanding in multiple states. Community concerns: water, noise, substations; mitigations: reuse, efficiency, restoration projects. WPLN NewsThe Salt Lake Tribune
  • Google — The Dalles & Hillsboro, OR; Council Bluffs, IA; Berkeley/Dorchester Counties, SC. Ongoing debates on water transparency and withdrawals. Reporters CommitteeGoogle Data CentersCoastal Conservation League
  • Microsoft — Quincy, WA; Phoenix metro; Columbus, OH; Atlanta, GA; Dallas–Fort Worth. Long-running discourse around diesel emissions and grid impacts; some reuse projects in WA. Washington State Department of EcologyUS EPA
  • Apple — Maiden, NC; emphasis on renewables and on-site generation, though critics debate how “green” the grid mix is. AppleData Center Knowledge
  • AWS — Northern Virginia; Oregon (Boardman/Morrow County); Phoenix; Dallas; Columbus. Economic-development deals weighed against tax abatements and local burdens. WPLN News

For market-by-market data (vacancy, MW under construction, pricing), see CBRE’s North America Data Center Trends and Cushman & Wakefield’s Global Data Center Market Comparison. CBRE+1Cushman & WakefieldCushwake


What it means for families, farms, and small businesses

  1. Bills & rates: Expect longer interconnection queues and grid upgrades to flow through rates—especially where projects cluster. The Wall Street Journal
  2. Water security: In arid or fast-growing counties, data-center cooling can compete with households and farms unless cities require non-potable sources and reuse. Business Insider
  3. Air/health: Diesel generator testing and added power-plant dispatch can raise local PM2.5/NO₂, linked to asthma and heart disease; enforcement and cleaner backup are key. Ecology Apps
  4. Land & heritage: Without guardrails, farmland and historic landscapes can be industrialized overnight, depressing nearby property values and quality of life. The Washington Post

From “Peasants” to Protectors: A Community Checklist

  • Ask for the numbers (annual power draw and water withdrawals), in writing, and insist on public reporting. The Dalles case shows you can win transparency. Reporters Committee
  • Require non-potable cooling and reuse where feasible; don’t let drinking water bear the load. See Quincy/Eagle Mountain models. US EPAEagle Mountain City
  • Buffer zones from homes/schools; noise caps verified by independent testing. (Prince William convened noise-ordinance work after complaints.) Prince William County Government
  • Community-Benefit Agreements (CBAs): fund air monitors, well-testing, bill relief, and energy-efficiency upgrades for neighbors.
  • Cumulative-impact reviews before rezoning farmland/historic land; avoid piecemeal approvals that hide the true footprint.

Global context: Who has the most?

  • United States leads by a wide margin (≈45% of global sites), followed by Germany and the UK; total global capacity and power demand are projected to more than double by 2030, driven largely by AI. StatistaVisual CapitalistIEA

References & Resources


Disclaimer

This article summarizes public reporting, government documents, and market research to inform readers about data-center siting and community impacts. It is not legal, engineering, or financial advice. Conditions vary by site; consult local experts and primary documents when making decisions.


About the Author

A.L. Childers (Audrey Childers) is a Carolina-born journalist and author focused on health, environment, and corporate power. Her work—spanning books, essays, and The Hypothyroidism Chick blog—connects personal well-being with policy and place.