The New York Times reported on Elon Musk’s takeover of the federal government. Trump has given Musk the power to close down agencies authorized by Congress, like the USAID and the Consumer Financial Control Board. Not a peep from the Republican-dominated Congress, as the world’s richest man flaunts his power to redesign the government and Trump meekly accedes to his every demand.
If you click this link, the story is a gift article.
Who ever dreamed that the election of Trump would lead to Elon Musk terrorizing every agency, a Cabinet whose members are dedicated to the destruction of the agencies they lead (possible exception: Rubio), and a foreign policy aligned with Russia against Europe? A domestic team determined to stamp out civil rights, defend bigotry, take away access to Medicaid, and privatize as much of the government as they can?
The DOGE plan is a coup. The richest man in the world has taken ownership of the federal government, with the consent of an eccentric, ignorant dotard in the Oval Office who was probably elected thanks to rigging and suppressing of votes by Musk and Putin.
Here are excerpts from the article in The New York Times about Elon Musk’s biggest acquisition. The federal government. His motive: he was angry about being regulated by the federal government. This is the government that funded Musk’s empire; he has received some $38 billion in federal subsidies since 2008, when he took charge of a near-bankrupt Tesla company. He loved the subsidies but hated the regulatuon. How could he stop the oversight of his business empire by the feds? Give almost $300 million to Trump and get the promise that Trump would give him free reign to wipe out the bureaucracy and replace it with AI.
From The New York Times:
It started as Elon Musk’s musings at a 2023 dinner party about how he would gut the federal bureaucracy. It evolved into an operation that has given him a singular position of influence over the government.
The plan for his Department of Government Efficiency was mapped out in a series of closely held meetings in Palm Beach, Fla., and through early intelligence-gathering efforts in Washingto
Without ceding control of his companies, the richest man in the world has embedded his engineers and aides inside the government’s critical digital infrastructure, moving with a swiftness that has stunned civil servants.
The story begins:
On the last Friday of September 2023, Elon Musk dropped in about an hour late to a dinner party at the Silicon Valley mansion of the technology investor Chamath Palihapitiya.
Mr. Musk’s visit was meant to be discreet. Still skittish about getting involved publicly in politics, he told the guests he had to be careful about supporting anyone in the Republican nomination fight. And yet here he was — joined by Claire Boucher, the singer known as Grimes and the mother of three of his children — at a $50,000-a-head dinner in honor of the presidential candidate Vivek Ramaswamy, who was running as an entrepreneur who would shake up the status quo.
As the night wore on, Mr. Musk held forth on the patio on a variety of topics, according to four people with knowledge of the conversation: his visit that week to the U.S.-Mexico border; the war in Ukraine; his frustrations with government regulations hindering his rocket company, SpaceX; and Mr. Ramaswamy’s highest priority, the dismantling of the federal bureaucracy.
Mr. Musk made clear that he saw the gutting of that bureaucracy as primarily a technology challenge. He told the party of around 20 that when he overhauled Twitter, the social media company that he bought in 2022 and later renamed X, the key was gaining access to the company’s servers.
Wouldn’t it be great, Mr. Musk offered, if he could have access to the computers of the federal government?
Just give him the passwords, he said jocularly, and he would make the government fit and trim.
What started as musings at a dinner party evolved into a radical takeover of the federal bureaucracy. It was driven with a frenetic focus by Mr. Musk, who channeled his libertarian impulses and resentment of regulatory oversight of his vast business holdings into a singular position of influence.
Without ceding control of his companies, the richest man in the world has embedded his engineers and aides inside the government’s critical digital infrastructure. Already, his Department of Government Efficiency, or DOGE, has inserted itself into more than 20 agencies, The New York Times has found.
Mr. Musk’s strategy has been twofold. His team grabbed control of the government’s human resources agency, the Office of Personnel Management, commandeering email systems to pressure civil servants to quit so he could cull the work force. And it burrowed into computer systems across the bureaucracy, tracing how money was flowing so the administration could choke it off. So far, Musk staff members have sought accessto at least seven sensitive government databases, including internal systems of the Social Security Administration and the Internal Revenue Service.
Mr. Musk’s transformation of DOGE from a casual notion into a powerful weapon is something possible only in the Trump era. It involves wild experimentation and an embrace of severe cost-cutting that Mr. Musk previously used to upend Twitter — as well as an appetite for political risk and impulsive decision-making that he shares with President Trump and makes others in the administration deeply uncomfortable.
In reporting how Mr. Musk and his allies executed their plan, The New York Times interviewed more than 60 people, including DOGE workers, friends of Mr. Musk’s, White House aides and administration officials who are dealing with the operation from the inside. Speaking on the condition of anonymity, many described a culture of secrecy that has made them afraid to speak publicly because of potential retaliation.
Mr. Musk’s stealth approach stunned both Democrats and civil servants. Failing to imagine an incursion from inside the bureaucracy, they were caught essentially defenseless.
The Times has learned new details about how the operation came together after the election, mapped out in a series of closely held meetings in Palm Beach, Fla., and through early intelligence-gathering efforts in Washington.
Seasoned conservative operatives like Stephen Miller and Russell Vought helped educate Mr. Musk about the workings of the bureaucracy. Soon, he stumbled on an opening. It was a little-known unit with reach across the government: the U.S. Digital Service, which President Barack Obama created in 2014 after the botched rollout of healthcare.gov.
Mr. Musk and his advisers — including Steve Davis, a cost cutter who worked with him at X and other companies — did not want to create a commission, as past budget hawks had done. They wanted direct, insider access to government systems. They realized they could use the digital office, whose staff had been focused on helping agencies fix technology problems, to quickly penetrate the federal government — and then decipher how to break it apart.
Since this is a gift article, please open the link and read the rest of it.
Never before in American history has there been subversion of the U.S. government that was so well planned and executed.
What will be left? How many agencies will Musk close down? How many highly skilled and knowledgeable civil servants will be fired? Which agencies will be irredeemably crippled by the loss of their best leaders?
This story should lead the news every day.

Outstanding, disturbing article. Everyone should read this.
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Our government is being pulled apart at the same time that Trump is rearranging the world order. It’s insane and premeditated.
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I’m telling myself lately that the one upside of all this is that it at least forces people to bear witness. Unfortunately I fear we haven’t come close to hitting bottom.
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Sadly, many Trump supporters think that he’s doing great things to modernize the government. They think Musk is saving billions of dollars, because he said so. They don’t believe the news reports about how his claims have been inflated or are false. What will remain after Musk retires his chainsaw?
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The last poll I saw, 70 percent of Republicans support what DOGE is doing.
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Democrats and Independents disapprove of Musk and DOGE.
This is Axios:
Driving the news: Trump’s approval ratings dropped into more “normal territory” for him, as described in a Washington Post analysis of recent polling, which could spell trouble for the administration as their billionaire budget buster also slips underwater.
In a Feb. 13-18 Washington Post-Ipsos poll, a net 34% of respondents said they approved of how Musk was handling his job, compared to 49% disapproving and 14% not sure.
The poll displayed a stark divide based on party ID, with just 6% of Democrats approving of how Musk has handled his job compared to 70% of Republicans.
But when asked if they approved of Musk shutting down federal government programs he deemed unnecessary, a smaller slice of Republicans (56%) gave their blessing, while 25% said they weren’t sure and 18% disapproved.
By the numbers: In several recent national polls, more respondents disapproved of Musk or the job he’s doing than approved of him.
Over half of respondents (55%) in a Quinnipiac University poll conducted Feb. 13 to 17 said Musk has too much power in making decisions affecting the U.S., while 36% think he has about the right amount of power.
A Pew survey of U.S. adults taken Jan. 27 to Feb. 2 showed that Americans had more negative (54%) than positive (42%) views of Musk (DOGE’s dissection of the federal government has dramatically escalated since the poll was conducted).
And a Feb. 15 to Feb. 17 Emerson College Poll showed 45% of respondents disapproved of the job Musk was doing, while 41% approved and 14% were neutral.
Some of those polls also show that Trump’s disapproval ratings are surpassing his approval ratings.
Per the Washington Post-Ipsos poll, 27% strongly approve of how Trump is handling his job — 39% strongly disapprove.
Sixty-two percent said they don’t consider the words honest and trustworthy to apply to the president.
But even as Trump’s approval ratings dip, multiple surveys showed Musk’s ratings are even lower.
https://search.app/tyNhRTtPTCqUcmyu8
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Wait. Just wait. It’s not bad enough yet. People haven’t lost enough yet. Remember when the Republicans wanted to get rid of the ACA? People showed up in their wheel chairs and on their crutches to bang on their senators’ doors. It will happen again only on a larger scale and for many more reasons. Let’s just see what happens in 2 weeks. We’re only at the beginning.
Excellent article by the way.
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I just watched a Meidas clip that showed Joe Rogan interviewing Elon Musk.
Musk said that Social Security was a Ponzi Scheme. Let that get out to the public, and watch everyone over 55 get angry. People pay into Social Security throughout their working lives. How dare the richest man in the world threaten to take it away!
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That despicable toad, Musk, is promoting that ancient myth that Social Security is a Ponzi scheme?!!! Seriously? First, SS is an intergenerational program approved by the government and there is no Ponzi anywhere near the SS administration unless you consider Musk to be a Ponzi scheme. A Ponzi scheme is a criminal activity that benefits one person, Mr. Ponzi or whoever is in charge of the consumer scam. SS benefits millions of people.
From the urban institute: Social Security is not a Ponzi scheme because it is a government program designed to provide retirement benefits funded by current workers’ payroll taxes, rather than a fraudulent investment scheme. While it faces financial challenges, it operates transparently and is not based on deception like a Ponzi scheme.
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Sheesh I thought Musk was supposed to be, if nothing else, innovative. And here he is repeating a low-info clichéd meme uttered by any old low-info conservative under 60yo.
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This is what I learned about FELON47 starting back in 2016 when I started researching his life before 2016. What he’s done since 2016 has supported what I learned about him.
Everything he does is transactional.
No one can trust him. I mean no one. Not his wife, his children and the family he grew up in. The one he left behind after the father died.
He cheats at everything. I mean everything.
We already know that he lies all the time and that he is obsessed with the idea of being a powerful dictator. I saw that in his expression the day he left the hospital after surviving COVID and almost dying as he was driven back to the White House. The photo taken showed him staring out the window of the armored car at his MAGA cult supporters lining the roadside cheering … for him. The expression on his face revealed what was coming. I saw awe in that expression. Awe for the power he held. I think it was that moment when he decided he would do anything to keep that power forever.
He expects total loyalty from everyone who works for him, and now he thinks everyone who works for the US government has to be loyal to him that include everyone serving in the US military.
Loyalty is a one-way street. He doesn’t have to be loyal to anyone who has to be loyal to him.
The January 6, 2021, Traitor, made a deal with Maniac Musk, and the convicted rapist sold Musk the United States for less than $280 million.
What is happening is known as a hostile takeover in the private sector.
When Project 2025 totally replaced the US Constitution, Musk will think he owns the United States. With the bankruptcy king’s approval, Musk will default on the US federal debt. That means the end to Social Security and Medicare.
The world will be plunged into the worst depression known history.
When the lifelong cheater and liar decides he’s had enough and retired to Mar-a-Lago, Musk will assume the presidency, which will be a brutal dictatorship by then, and pardon the FELON for all his crimes.
Musk will then become Emperor, in his mind, and act like one since there won’t be anyone left to complain publicly. Anyone who would be dead or in a death camp waiting for death.
What did Musk buy for less than $280 million.
Annual GDP is almost $28 Trillion. The national debt won’t exist anymore.
The US has the second largest manufacturing sector in the world.
The US military won’t be what it was, but it will still be powerful, and it will by Musk’s military. It will be all white. Most of the generals the FELON and Musk appoint, will be lackeys and incompetent. But they won’t be the ones dying on battlefields all over the world.
There will be no more choice to join the military or not. It will be mandatory to join at 18, regardless of physical health. To escape the draft, they will have to be wheelchair bound.
The courts will not stop the Traitorous Felon or Maniac Musk.
Peaceful protests will not stop them. I’m not planning to join any peaceful protests. That would be like volunteering to become an unarmed target for a shooting range.
The only thing that will stop them is what Thomas Jefferson said we have to do to refresh the Tree of Liberty. And it has to start soon!
No one is going to stop what’s happening with talk, with words.
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On the Nicolle Wallace (MSNBC) show a few days ago, she interviewed a veteran who was involved in experimental research through the NIH. He had stage 4 melanoma in 40 areas in his body and was given about 2 weeks to live. Because of this experimental treatment, he is now cancer-free. He was on the show because the funding for this experimental research was stopped. I believe he said he had no chemotherapy. Now just think about that and let that sink in.
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Before the election, we ALL knew it would be bad–Trump back in office and the raging limitations of the MAGA cult.
But I think I can speak for many of us here that we didn’t know HOW bad–(1) I knew of Project 2025, but not how organized or psycho-driven it was; and (2) who could have possibly known of the extent of the Musk effect?
(3) We are also in a watershed of the powers that technology (technofascists) and mass and fast communications (Fox, etc. and entertainment/ games) have wrought–and these are (relatively) new.
As many here can attest to who are over 70, when we grew up there were no such things–not even in our thinking, at least at the rate, size, and influence that we all experience now.
And then there is the constant pressure to privatize everything and what has occurred in education over the last 80 years–the drift away from personal/cultural/civic development to a hyper-capitalist and transactional mindset, and education as “workforce training” and for getting a job.
Seriously, there are many bad things in history that “we” could have learned from but didn’t, or at least not fully. But there are also changes over the last half of the last century (and onward) that were too fast to assimilate in the common way people do over generations.
It seems to me that to “make America great again” cannot mean to be like Trump or to move in the directions (on any front) that he and Musk (and Vought) apparently wants to take us. They all are fine examples of persons who have never learned or who have left behind whatever was actually good about America before all this happened. CBK
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A FOX commentator said after the White House fiasco that Trump deserves the Nobel Peace Prize. If he doesn’t get it, it’s meaningless.
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Diane: OMG . . . just when you think it cannot ger worse . . . CBK
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. . . maybe they meant: the Goebel’s Peace Prize. CBK
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Most likely. On FOX, they don’t know the difference
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Maybe someday we will realize that learning about something is not the only thing required to change it. Education is important but other issues are in play. Many Republicans know that what they are doing is wrong but doing right isn’t a motivating factor. Fear, the desire for power, greed are all motivating drives. Maybe we will also realize that reason alone does not suffice in problem solving. How many times have we tried to convince someone of something using the most rational arguments to no avail? Further, how can we even employ reason to the extent that it might work when facts become opinions? Lastly, maybe we will come to realize that every horrible thing I see in the other person is also in me. Wow! Then what do I do? 😊
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Mamie: “Many Republicans know that what they are doing is wrong but doing right isn’t a motivating factor.”
Exactly that–isn’t this the point of educating to those factors first? and both the family and formal education being at the center of that educating experience? And reasonability as an ideal is still the center of a democratic political existence as well as our bill of rights. Without it and the truth it seeks, nothing will work (the Federalist Papers are full of this idea.)
Of course there are no guarantees, but the long-term must be accounted for in our account of our present problems.
This is no place for an adequate analysis, but hopelessness or even nihilism, and a conscious carelessness about one’s own hypocrisy need not be the end run. We are developmental and have deep-set inborn aims that come with the order of our existence, that we resonate with, and which can be enhanced by our education or dragged around behind us like a bag of rocks.
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Even, as you say, one can be entirely aware of one’s hypocrisy (e.g., Rubio on the couch) and still hypocrisy is not the natural outcome of one’s human existence. We have had hundreds of years now becoming “attuned” and habituated to democracy and the freedoms we all enjoy, but that are indeed on the block. Slowly, however, we are as a country, waking up.
Here is one suggestion–where we can, change how we relate to and talk about ourselves. Refer to ourselves and others as “other Americans” who think and do this or that–rather than as democrats and republicans. Let us keep the mantle of Americans as a coverall at least where we can. At least Fox News will have trouble with that since they are so common to create and turn every other label into a pejorative term and to continue to demonize it. CBK
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Trump such an uneducated, insecure little man, that he is easily impressed by smart people & therefore he allows them to control his thinking to a certain extent. That’s why he puts other millionaires or billionaires in his cabinet because their success impressed him, but also, they won’t care if they destroy their assigned departments like Education cuz they don’t need the paltry government paycheck.
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