James Fallows is a veteran journalist, one of the best. He predicts disaster ahead because of the ignorance of the DOGE team slashing the federal workforce.

Screenshot from CNN, credited to John Nelson, of Delta regional jet flight 4819 upside-down after landing at Pearson Airport in Toronto, after crash landing today.
He writes:
This post is about today’s crash-landing of a commuter jet, en route from Minneapolis to Toronto, which for still-unexplained reasons flipped over and landed on its back without killing any passengers.
Good news for all those aboard.
It coincides with cautionary news about anyone flying on US-based airlines. Let’s go through the de-brief:
The big questions.
Was today’s crash-landing in Toronto directly traceable to this past weekend’s Musk-Trump mass layoffs of FAA officials in the US?
—Almost certainly not.
Will future crashes be directly traceable to this move?
—Almost certainly so.
Any future-history of US airline disasters in 2026 or beyond will probably start its narrative in this past holiday weekend of 2025. That is when the Musk tech-bro team known as DOGE, instructed by Russel Vought and empowered by Trump, began its mass layoffs of air-safety officials whose employment status showed “probationary.” (Even if they had been on the job for decades, and were classified as “probationary” only because they had recently received a promotion.)
After any aviation disaster, the careful investigators of the NTSB try to reconstruct the “accident chain.” We’re beginning the accident chain for future disaster, right now.
Let’s take this step-by-step.
What happened in Toronto.
As with almost any aviation accident, it will take time to be sure. What is known as the time I write is this:
- The airplane was a Bombardier regional jet. By coincidence, this was the the same make, though a slightly different model, as the regional jet involved in the large-casualty collision near National Airport in DC this month.
- Many of the passengers have been taken to the hospital. But as of the time I write, all appear to have survived.
- The weather was challenging, and the winds were very strong and gusty, when the plane touched down at Toronto/Pearson and then apparently flipped over onto its back. Did the gusty crosswinds cause the plane to lose its balance and flip? At this moment no one can be sure. The weather and winds appear to have been bad but not unmanageable.¹ We’ll see what further data might reveal.
- Was this in any way related to the large-scale layoffs of air traffic control professionals by the new Musk-Trump-Doge regime? There’s no reason yet to think so. The recording of Air Traffic Control guidance from the Toronto tower, which you can listen to here², seems entirely routine until the moment the regional jet has a bad touch down.³
But will it be related to crashes in the future? That seems to me inevitable.
—You lay off much of the fire-fighting force, you’re inviting a destructive fire.
—You lay off teachers, you’re inviting ignorance.
—And if you lay off the people who have made air-travel safe, you are inviting unsafe air travel.
Which is Trump, Musk, and their ninjas seem to be doing now.
But don’t ask me. Ask someone who has devoted his life to air-traffic safety.
What will happen in our skies.
Someone I have been in touch with for many years, and whose airspace I once flew through during his time as a controller and mine as a pilot in that part of the country, sends a message today that I thought worth quoting in full. This correspondent writes:
They fired a bunch of probationery employees last night. Basically everyone other than controllers or safety inspectors, apparently.
It’s one of those things that has a slow but corrosive effect on safety. For example: Our team is bracing for cuts. One of the biggest things we do is environmental review and community engagement for proposed actions in airspace or procedures.
So if someone needs a new or amended approach [JF note: like those over the Potomac, in light of recent problems], the flight procedure team—currently staffed at 13, should be 17—designs it and gives it to us.
Our environmental specialists do the NEPA [environmental policy] review; myself and other ATC subject matter experts assist them by checking the procedures, explaining what’s going on, and checking it for any variety of things in how it fits in with everything else in the area. We also do community engagement stuff if it is called for.
[On our team] all the ‘probationary’ people got fired.
Will it lead to disaster? Not immediately. But fewer people trying to do the same amount of work will lead to stuff getting missed….
We prioritize and do the most safety-critical stuff first. But a lot will fall aside.
‘Boys throw stones at frogs in fun…’
Let’s return to the theme of a preceding dispatch: Elon Musk and his acolytes are having fun, and perhaps preparing for a privatization of the FAA, but in the process they are putting all of the rest of us in danger.
—I submit that I know more about air safety, and about FAA procedures, than Elon Musk does, or any of the members of his zealot/ignoramus team.
—And I know at least a thousand people who are vastly more experienced and knowledgeable than I am.
The Musk/Trump people are empowering the know-nothings. Who tear things down because they have no idea of who built them up.
Conceivably this will be the barrier—the risk that constituents might die in airplane crahses—that stops them? When GOP politicians flying out of DCA think that Musk-ite shortcuts might kill them? When even Musk’s private jets have to deal with over-stressed air traffic controllers?
We don’t know. But the powers that be are pushing the limits.
—As a pilot, I trust air traffic controllers. As a passenger, I trust the multi-layer safety network that decades’ worth of relentless self-examination has built up.
—As a citizen, I do not trust the standards that the clown-corrupt Trump/Musk regime has introduced.
‘Defund the police’ became a right-wing campaign slogan. ‘Defund Air Traffic Control’ will get us killed.

They are ignorant, yes, but they know what they’ve been hired to do. This is good old-fashioned Hostile Takeover Disaster Capitalism, destroy a public sector function and replace it with one owned by Musk.
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Fire engines raced onto the tarmac and began spraying thick sheets of white fire retardant over the aircraft’s battered fuselage. It’s unclear where the fire originated, but video shows the plane’s fiberglass frame had melted around the engine and thick black streaks stained its side.
After the aircraft came to a standstill, “we were upside down hanging like bats,” Koukov said. He was able to unbuckle himself and stand upright on the ceiling of the plane, but some people needed help getting down from their seats.
Nelson said the scene was chaotic as he and his seatmate released themselves from their belts and fell to the floor. People were yelling for them to get out of the plane, and they made a beeline towards an opening, he said.
Peter Carlson, another passenger on the Delta flight, told CBC that “it was cement and metal” in the upside-down plane. “The absolute initial feeling is just need to get out of this.”
“What I saw was everyone on that plane suddenly became very close, in terms of how to help one another, how to console one another,”
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Not really new, but have you listened to the gobbledygook that is coming out of Trump’s mouth? For example, you could see evidence of his mental machinations when asked about something Marco Rubio said in his weekend speech. First, he said he didn’t know and hadn’t heard the speech. Then he (apparently) realized there was something about the speech that he wanted to comment on. (So now he did hear it.) So, he made his comment and the conversation went forward, such as it was.
He also commonly answers questions with material that has nothing to do with the content of the questions. I call that a pretty good cover for a consistent lack of accountability. The press is still thinking that they should not counter such rhetorical methods I guess out of respect for the office, or perhaps just because they feel gob smacked, like me, who got tired of hitting myself in the head with my hand and saying “doeng, doeng, doeng” as I jump quickly to mute the program when Trump is talking out of a sense of self-preservation of my own thinking patterns. CBK
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BTW, I think it’s obvious that the Trump voters in this country have voted away the best political thing history has to offer–a vibrant democracy–and given it away to a person with the intellectual, moral, and social capacity of a toddler. CBK
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No one wants to confront the elephant in the room, which is a real question of how far Trump’s cognitive decline has progressed.
After all of the pearl clutching in the MSM about Biden, apparently now it’s hear no evil, speak no evil.
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Birdchum: Yes: CRICKETS. (What an awful mess.) CBK
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“The firings hit the FAA as it is facing a shortfall in controllers. Federal officials have been raising concerns about an overtaxed and understaffed air traffic control system for years, especially after a series of close calls between planes at U.S. airports. Among the reasons they have cited for staffing shortages are uncompetitive pay, long shifts, intensive training and mandatory retirements.”
The system is already stretched thin. The last thing they need are cuts.
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Does Trump care, or have any clue as to what kind of mayhem is going to begin as Musk and his technobrats continue their campaign of breaking the federal government?
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I wonder whether the connection of relevance is not so much DOGE-Trump-Privatization, etc but Climate Change. What I read was there was very gusty, unusual weather. Increasingly erratic, extreme conditions are, it seems to me, an extreme danger. Made none the better for the madness among the AT Controllers and their bosses.
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Best comment I’ve seen on this accident from James Medlock:
https://bsky.app/profile/jdcmedlock.bsky.social/post/3lihmefgmi226
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Great!!
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A complex society relying on complex infrastructures cannot not be run on some minimalist privately funded low cost notion.
A simple equation. It is an oddity that some folk who accumulate billions in wealth have a chronically simplistic impractical view of how societies are run
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deteremined: Billionaires don’t get rich by understanding social and political or any complexities. The “oddity” in your exceptional statement is that wealth is either inherited or the product of a very small sliver of that same complexity and kind of “intelligence,” which has a huge multiplicity of functions and fields–one of which this person or group was good at and/or extremely lucky.
But it’s also a given that there is no natural or necessary connection or fungible/ transferrable qualities between wealth and wisdom on any front. In fact, one could make a case that having wealth too easily becomes a detriment to the development of genuineness and wisdom even if the potential is present in any one person.
And as we are seeing now, it is all too common that because one is wealthy, somehow that wealth becomes a source of arrogance, classicism, and megalomania. CBK
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