Joel Skousen’s Strategic Relocation (last substantive update ~2020) was groundbreaking for its time, providing a rigorous, threat-based analysis of retreat locations centered on surviving a high-intensity external conflict—primarily a nuclear exchange followed by potential invasion or totalitarian consolidation. His metrics remain excellent for that specific scenario: distance from nuclear targets, upwind fallout patterns, defensible terrain, low population density, abundant water/timber/soil, and conservative political culture to resist post-collapse tyranny.
However, as of late 2025, the dominant threat vector has shifted dramatically from external kinetic war to internal systemic control executed through technology, energy dependence, and economic pressure. Skousen’s framework largely overlooks what is now the single most transformative force reshaping rural America: the hyperscale data center / AI infrastructure boom.
This is the key metric Skousen is missing so far. And threat levels are still evolving.
Avoidance of Hyperscale Data Center Corridors and Their “Constant Drain” Effects
Unlike intermittent natural disasters (hurricanes, tornadoes, wildfires) or even a hypothetical nuclear strike, data centers impose a persistent, compounding degradation on rural retreat viability:
In Skousen’s era, the primary rural threat was post-nuclear chaos or martial law. In 2025, the primary rural threat is quiet annexation by Big Tech. This slow-motion transformation turns viable retreat zones into high-cost, high-density, utility-stressed suburbs without a single shot being fired.
Classic Skousen favorites like northern Idaho, western Montana, eastern Oregon, and parts of Utah and Wyoming—once near-perfect on his metrics—are now seeing aggressive 2025–2030 proposals for gigawatt-scale data centers driven by AI training demand. These developments introduce the very “constant drain” that erodes self-sufficiency faster than occasional tornadoes or even manageable hurricanes.
Conversely, warmer Southern rural zones that Skousen historically downgraded due to hurricane risk (e.g., the Northern Florida Panhandle, inland North Florida, southern Alabama, northern Louisiana) score exceptionally high on the new decisive metric: complete absence of hyperscale development combined with superior climate-driven food independence.
The result is an inversion of traditional rankings. Areas with long growing seasons, abundant rainfall, and proven insulation from the AI infrastructure boom now offer the longest viable runway for personal freedom and self-sufficiency during the predicted 15–20 year window of gradual systemic tightening—precisely the period before conditions may become unworkable short of divine intervention.
Skousen’s framework is not wrong for its original threat model; it is simply incomplete for the current and near-future threat model. Adding “Avoidance of Hyperscale Data Center Corridors” as a primary filter—weighted at least as heavily as growing season or water access—produces the dramatically updated rankings reflected in this guide.
Until Skousen (or a successor) formally integrates this metric, his classic recommendations risk directing preparers into regions that will quietly lose their retreat viability within a decade, while overlooking Southern rural gems that currently offer the optimal balance of warmth, resources, affordability, and freedom from the most insidious modern threat.
Data Center Activity: Low–Moderate
Threat Notes: Small clusters near Birmingham/Huntsville only. Rural south and central counties remain insulated—minimal grid strain. Strong zoning freedom.
Data Center Activity: Low
Threat Notes: Harsh climate and logistics keep hyperscale away—energy cost > DC risk.
Data Center Activity: High (Top-Tier)
Threat Notes: Phoenix metro is a national hotspot. Severe water stress, heat load, grid saturation, land near substations rapidly industrializing.
Data Center Activity: Emerging → Moderate
Threat Notes: Incentive-driven projects appearing quietly. Watch transmission corridors and economic-development zones.
Data Center Activity: High
Threat Notes: Power cost, wildfire, seismic risk. Regulatory pressure may push growth outward, but the internal footprint remains large.
Data Center Activity: Moderate
Threat Notes: Front Range pressure; western slope remains low. Wildfire risk is growing.
Data Center Activity: Low–Moderate
Threat Notes: Enterprise/colo only. High power costs, tight zoning.
Data Center Activity: Moderate
Threat Notes: Northeast corridor spillover. Small land base; coastal storm exposure.
Data Center Activity: Moderate (metro-clustered)
Threat Notes: Boom limited to central/south metros. Panhandle & north-central Florida remain low-pressure. Hurricane risk is the main tradeoff.
Data Center Activity: High (Rapidly Expanding)
Threat Notes: Atlanta is a top U.S. hub. Massive grid expansion, ratepayer risk, and farmland conversion are spreading outward.
Data Center Activity: Low
Threat Notes: Cost, land scarcity, island logistics, block scale.
Data Center Activity: Moderate
Threat Notes: Boise/Treasure Valley draw. Spillover risk into rural areas near power.
Data Center Activity: High
Threat Notes: Chicago metro saturation. Power delivery delays and industrial corridor creep.
Data Center Activity: Moderate
Threat Notes: Indy + Chicago spillover. Rezoning near interstates/transmission lines.
Data Center Activity: Moderate
Threat Notes: Longstanding hyperscale presence. Watch water use and incentive politics.
Data Center Activity: Low–Emerging
Threat Notes: KC fringe only. Tornado exposure, but minimal grid pressure.
Data Center Activity: Low–Moderate
Threat Notes: River flood zones. Otherwise, low DC pressure in rural east/south.
Data Center Activity: Moderate (pockets)
Threat Notes: Some large campuses exist, but many northern parishes remain untouched. Storm/humidity considerations.
Data Center Activity: Low
Threat Notes: Cold climate and remoteness limit interest.
Data Center Activity: Moderate–High
Threat Notes: DMV spillover from Northern Virginia. Zoning conflict risk.
Data Center Activity: Moderate
Threat Notes: Enterprise demand only. High regulatory friction.
Data Center Activity: Moderate
Threat Notes: Southeast MI pockets. Upper Peninsula remains under very low pressure.
Data Center Activity: Moderate
Threat Notes: Twin Cities enterprise + some hyperscale. Winter resilience.
Data Center Activity: Low–Moderate
Threat Notes: Minimal tech pressure outside Jackson. Tornado/humidity tradeoffs.
Data Center Activity: Moderate
Threat Notes: KC/St. Louis clusters. Ozarks remain insulated.
Data Center Activity: Emerging
Threat Notes: Developers eye cheap land + power. Grid-scale proposals create future risk, wildfire exposure.
Data Center Activity: Low–Moderate
Threat Notes: Omaha/Lincoln only. Corridor siting risk.
Data Center Activity: Moderate
Threat Notes: Reno/Vegas orbit. Water scarcity + heat are the primary constraints.
Data Center Activity: Low
Threat Notes: Winter + small parcels. Minimal hyperscale interest.
Data Center Activity: High
Threat Notes: Dense Northeast colo belt. Land scarcity, high taxes, and grid congestion.
Data Center Activity: Low–Emerging
Threat Notes: Water scarcity and wildfire are the real constraints.
Data Center Activity: High
Threat Notes: NYC metro saturation. High regulation and power cost.
Data Center Activity: Moderate–High
Threat Notes: Raleigh/Durham + Charlotte growth. Corridor creep and utility constraints.
Data Center Activity: Low
Threat Notes: Cold climate; otherwise minimal tech pressure.
Data Center Activity: High–Moderate
Threat Notes: Columbus region primary magnet. Transmission and land conversion issues.
Data Center Activity: Emerging–Moderate
Threat Notes: OKC/Tulsa interest. Tornado risk, but low grid saturation.
Data Center Activity: High (localized)
Threat Notes: The Hillsboro corridor is a central West Coast hub. Eastern OR remains low.
Data Center Activity: Emerging → High Growth
Threat Notes: One of the fastest-growing pipelines. Zoning fights and grid expansion are coming.
Data Center Activity: Low
Threat Notes: Small land base; coastal exposure.
Data Center Activity: Moderate
Threat Notes: Greenville/Columbia pockets. Inland areas remain viable.
Data Center Activity: Low
Threat Notes: Winter exposure; minimal tech pressure.
Data Center Activity: Moderate
Threat Notes: Nashville/Chattanooga corridors. Rural east/south is still viable.
Data Center Activity: High (Top-Tier)
Threat Notes: DFW is a national hub. Grid volatility, heat, water, and land near substations are under pressure.
Data Center Activity: Moderate
Threat Notes: Wasatch Front growth. Water scarcity is emerging.
Data Center Activity: Low
Threat Notes: Cold climate, strict regulation.
Data Center Activity: Very High (Global Epicenter)
Threat Notes: Loudoun County = world’s largest concentration. Grid strain, zoning backlash, rural loss, and rate pressure.
Data Center Activity: Moderate
Threat Notes: Seattle metro + some east-side nodes. Wildfire east of the Cascades.
Data Center Activity: Low–Emerging
Threat Notes: Spillover potential from VA/PA. Corridor-specific risk.
Data Center Activity: Low–Moderate
Threat Notes: Madison/Milwaukee enterprise. Winter resilience is the primary concern.
Data Center Activity: Low–Emerging
Threat Notes: Energy-rich and remote. Transmission limits and winter are the gatekeepers.
A. Data-Center Pressure (0–10) — weight 30%
B. Grid & Rate Risk (0–10) — weight 15%
Higher score = safer (less volatility).
Look for: “power delivery delays”, new generation plans, rate battles, mega-load forecasts. U.S. Energy Information Administration+3U.S. Energy Information Administration+3The Department of Energy’s Energy.gov+3
C. Water Security (0–10) — weight 20%
Higher score = easier well/spring access + lower scarcity risk. (Arizona/NV/UT/NM score lower; springs/river regions score higher.)
D. Zoning / Freedom / Build Flexibility (0–10) — weight 15%
Higher score = rural counties with permissive codes; minimal HOA; easier wells/solar/outbuildings.
E. Disaster Profile (0–10) — weight 10%
Higher = fewer catastrophic risks. (Coastal hurricane/storm surge lowers; tornado alley lowers; wildfire/earthquake zones lower.)
F. Land Affordability & Tax Drag (0–10) — weight 5%
Higher = cheaper acreage + lower property tax pressure.
G. Cultural Compatibility / Governance Drift (0–10) — weight 5%
Higher = likely alignment with your “freedom + self-sufficiency” values.
Total =
0.30A + 0.15B + 0.20C + 0.15D + 0.10E + 0.05F + 0.05*G
How to use it in real life (county-level screening):
I’m keeping each state compact but more actionable: where the clusters are + how the threat shows up.
Clusters: Birmingham/Hoover corridor; Huntsville area.
Threats: localized substation buildouts along I-65/I-20; otherwise, rural south/inland stays good.
Clusters: Anchorage small footprint.
Threats: energy logistics > data centers.
Clusters: Phoenix / “Data Center Alley” West Valley (Goodyear–Buckeye–Mesa/Tempe orbit).
Threats: water + heat + grid capacity fights; land near power gets bid up. CBRE+2CBRE+2
Clusters: Little Rock orbit; eastern border logistics corridors.
Threats: incentives + ratepayer politics; “quiet counties” can flip fast. Axios+1
Clusters: Bay Area/Silicon Valley; LA/OC; San Diego; Inland Empire.
Threats: power cost + wildfire + permitting; growth can “push” into NV/AZ/OR.
Clusters: Denver/Front Range.
Threats: wildfire + land cost; rural western slope much lower.
Clusters: Hartford/New Haven enterprise/colo.
Threats: power costs; tighter zoning.
Clusters: NE corridor spillover.
Threats: small state = land scarcity; coastal storm risk.
Clusters: Miami–Ft Lauderdale; Orlando; Tampa; Jacksonville.
Threats: hurricanes/insurance + localized utility growth corridors; Panhandle/north-central remain comparatively insulated if you track county rezones.
Clusters: Metro Atlanta (the monster), plus exurban ring pushing south/west.
Threats: grid expansion for data centers, ratepayer risk, and farmland conversion. CBRE+2AP News+2
Threats: cost + land + island logistics.
Clusters: Boise/Treasure Valley.
Threats: corridor targeting near power + migration pressure.
Clusters: Chicago metro.
Threats: power delivery delays + tight vacancy, + corridor industrialization. CBRE+1
Clusters: Indy; Chicago spillover NW Indiana.
Threats: industrial rezoning near interstates/transmission.
Clusters: Des Moines/Cedar Rapids pockets.
Threats: water + incentives; rural siting can appear quietly.
Clusters: KC fringe.
Threats: tornado profile; incentives can attract sudden builds.
Clusters: Louisville/Cincy orbit.
Threats: river flood zones; corridor creep.
Clusters: Baton Rouge / New Orleans orbit; select north projects.
Threats: humidity + storms; watch incentive-driven megasites. (Some major projects fuel public scrutiny.) The Verge+1
Threats: winter + short season (your homestead lens).
Clusters: I-270 corridor; Baltimore orbit.
Threats: zoning conflict; spillover from NoVA.
Clusters: Boston/Cambridge enterprise.
Threats: power cost + permits.
Clusters: Detroit/Ann Arbor; Grand Rapids.
Threats: winter resilience; UP very low DC pressure.
Clusters: Twin Cities.
Threats: legislative pushback on incentives is growing in some states (watch policy drift). The Verge
Clusters: Jackson area small; Gulf coast minor.
Threats: tornado/humidity; incentive surprise builds.
Clusters: KC / St. Louis.
Threats: tornado; corridor creep.
Clusters: scattered interest; not a top market.
Threats: grid strain proposals + wildfire + valley “boom” effects (your list already flags this). Pew Research Center+1
Clusters: Omaha/Lincoln.
Threats: corridor siting near transmission.
Clusters: Reno/Tahoe logistics; Vegas orbit.
Threats: water + heat + power siting.
Threats: winter + tax structure; small footprint.
Clusters: Northern NJ / NY metro colo belt.
Threats: land scarcity, dense zoning, and power cost.
Clusters: Albuquerque/Santa Fe light.
Threats: water + wildfire.
Clusters: NYC metro; some upstate nodes.
Threats: high regulation; power cost.
Clusters: Raleigh/Durham; Charlotte.
Threats: corridor growth + utility constraints. CBRE+1
Threats: winter; otherwise, low DC pressure.
Clusters: Columbus region (big magnet); Cleveland/Cincy.
Threats: transmission + land conversion.
Clusters: OKC/Tulsa.
Threats: tornado; incentives.
Clusters: Hillsboro/Portland area.
Threats: wildfire/smoke; permitting; corridor constraints.
Clusters: Philly orbit; Harrisburg/Allentown logistics corridors.
Threats: aggressive pipeline growth; zoning fights. The Verge+1
Threats: coastal storms + small land base.
Clusters: Greenville/Spartanburg; Columbia; Charleston.
Threats: coastal storm zones; inland is more stable.
Threats: winter; otherwise low DC.
Clusters: Nashville; Chattanooga; Knoxville corridor.
Threats: corridor creep; flood zones.
Clusters: Dallas–Fort Worth (top tier), Houston, Austin/San Antonio pockets.
Threats: grid volatility, heat, water, land near substations; biggest magnet dynamics. CBRE+2JLL+2
Clusters: SLC/Provo.
Threats: water + power siting.
Threats: winter, regs, small parcels.
Clusters: Loudoun/Prince William/Fairfax (“Data Center Alley”).
Threats: the full suite: grid strain, rate battles, zoning backlash, noise/visual, land distortion. Data Centers+3CBRE+3CBRE+3
Clusters: Seattle; some east-side nodes.
Threats: wildfire east; permitting west.
Clusters: panhandle spillover potential from VA/MD/PA.
Threats: corridor builds if NoVA pushes outward.
Clusters: Milwaukee/Madison.
Threats: winter + localized incentives.
Clusters: scattered; energy-rich.
Threats: transmission constraints; winter; potential “energy-to-compute” plays.
These are illustrative first-pass scores (county choice can swing them). Higher total = better fit for your “avoid DC strain + keep water/growing season + zoning freedom.”
What this shows: under your stated priorities, North-Central FL + South AL inland come out #1/#2, with the FL Panhandle still excellent but a hurricane profile lowering the Disaster score.