Elon Musk’s team of vandals, known as DOGE, have raided government agencies in search of deep cuts that they can take credit for. Most of their claims of savings turn out to be false or inflated but they persist in canceling contracts and firing government employees. The effects are now being felt at the Social Security Administration.
Lisa Rein and Hannah Natanson of The Washington Post write:
The Social Security Administration website crashed four times in 10 days this month, blocking millions of retirees and disabled Americans from logging in to their online accounts because the servers were overloaded. In the field, office managers have resorted to answering phones at the front desk as receptionists because so many employees have been pushed out. But the agency no longer has a system to monitor customers’ experience with these services, because that office was eliminated as part of the cost-cutting efforts led by Elon Musk.
And the phones keep ringing. And ringing.
The federal agency that delivers $1.5 trillion a year in earned benefits to 73 million retired workers, their survivors and poor and disabled Americans is engulfed in crisis — further undermining its ability to provide reliable and quick service to vulnerable customers, according to internal documents and more than two dozen current and former agency employees and officials, customers and others who interact with Social Security.
Financial services executive Frank Bisignano is scheduled to face lawmakers Tuesday during a Senate confirmation hearing as President Donald Trump’s pick to become the permanent commissioner. For now, the agency is run by a caretaker leader in his sixth week on the job who has raced to push out more than 12 percent of the staff of 57,000. He has conceded that the agency’s phone service “sucks” and acknowledged that Musk’s U.S. DOGE Service is really in charge, pushing a single-minded mission to find benefits fraud despite vast evidence that the problem is overstated.
The turmoil is leaving many retirees, disabled claimants and legal immigrants who need Social Security cards with less access or shut out of the system altogether, according to those familiar with the problems.
“What’s going on is the destruction of the agency from the inside out, and it’s accelerating,” Sen. Angus King (I-Maine) said in an interview. “I have people approaching me all the time in their 70s and 80s, and they’re beside themselves. They don’t know what’s coming.”
King’s home state has the country’s oldest population. “What they’re doing now is unconscionable,” he said.
Leland Dudek — the accidental leader elevated to acting commissioner after he fed data to Musk’s team behind his bosses’ backs — has issued rapid-fire policy changes that have created chaos for front-line staff. Under pressure from the secretive Musk team, Dudek has pushed out dozens of officials with years of expertise in running Social Security’s complex benefit and information technology systems. Others have left in disgust.
The moves have upended an agency that, despite the popularity of its programs, has been underfunded for years, faces potential insolvency in a decade and has been led by four commissioners in five months — just one of them Senate-confirmed. The latest controversy came last week, when Dudek threatened to shut down operations in response to a federal judge’s ruling that Dudek claimed would leave no one with access to beneficiaries’ personal information to serve them.
Alarmed lawmakers are straining to answer questions from angry constituents in their districts. Calls have flooded into congressional offices. The AARP announced on Monday that more than 2,000 retirees per week have called the organization since early February — double the usual number — with concerns about whether benefits they paid for during their working careers will continue. Social Security is the primary source of income for about 40 percent of older Americans…
With aging technology systems and a $15 billion budget that has stayed relatively flat over a decade, Social Security was already struggling to serve the public amid an explosion of retiring baby boomers. The staff that reviews claims for two disability programs was on life support following massive pandemic turnover — and still takes 233 days on average to review an initial claim.
But current and former officials, advocates and others who interact with the agency — many of whom spoke on the condition of anonymity for fear of retribution — said Social Security has been damaged even further by the rapid cuts and chaos of Trump’s first two months in office. Many current and former officials fear it’s part of a long-sought effort by conservatives to privatize all or part of the agency….
Musk’s DOGE team began poring through Social Security’s massive trove of private data on millions of Americans, working in a fourth-floor conference room at the Woodlawn, Maryland, headquarters, with blackout curtains on the windows and an armed security guard posted outside.
Their obsession with false claims that millions of deceased people were fraudulently receiving benefits consumed the DOGE team at first. Then came new mandates designed to address alleged fraud: Direct deposit transactions and identity authentication that affect almost everyone receiving benefits will no longer be able to be done by phone. Customers with computers will be directed to go through the process online — and those without access to one to wait in line at their local field office. A change announced internally last week will require legal immigrants with authorization to work in the United States and newly naturalized citizens to apply for or update their Social Security cards in person, eliminating a long-standing practice that sent the cards automatically through the mail.
The article goes on much longer to describe the confusion and chaos among elderly people seeking information. Wait times for telephone calls, which used to be answered to 10-15 minutes, may take two hours, three hours or longer.
DOGE is making government less efficient.

The impact of this miscarriage of justice will fall mostly on those who are in the process of application or changing status. This means that people who are 60-70 years old now will bear the brunt of the deliberate attempt to wreck social security and then blame it on the government. This is also the demographic that took it on the chin when schools began to orient themselves more toward responding to test scores rather than teaching.
I could add several more examples of this demographic being the recipient of more than its share of the manure associated with politics.
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Yup. I’ve been reading the commets at he WaPo article, just came across an example: “I applied in November for my benefits to start in December. I was told it might take up to a month to complete the “investigation”… it’s been 4 months now and not a word. When I called to ask what’s going on, they said the wait would be more than 2 hours — then said “call back later” and hung up on me.”
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This is criminal and venal but what else is new with the Trump/Musk wrecking crew.
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Deliberately Adding To This Crisis: Health Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. said on TH 3/27/25 he will cut the department he leads, reducing 10,000 full-time jobs and closing half its regional offices.
The restructuring, along with previous voluntary departures, will result in a total downsizing to 62,000 full-time employees from 82,000.
“We aren’t just reducing bureaucratic sprawl. We are realigning the organization with its core mission and our new priorities in reversing the chronic disease epidemic.”
https://www.usatoday.com/story/news/politics/2025/03/27/robert-kennedy-cuts-hhs/82687062007/
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This is what happens when too many people vote to install an tinpot dictator in The White House. We no longer have a government that works for us. Our current government works against the most vulnerable among us: the elderly, the poor, immigrants, and veterans.
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I am the poor elderly –in my 70s and on poverty level Social Security Retirement Income (SSRI). Right now, I have only $93.52 in my bank account (and no savings), so that must get me through for the next week, until the 3rd of April. (For some reason, that’s the day that SS has long scheduled my checks to be deposited –which is not in time to mail in a rent check so I have to use Zelle.) I also have automatic payments deducted for other things that I’m afraid won’t clear if my SS check is held up.
To make matters worse, I lost two roommates this month, who had the electricity in their name because I couldn’t get it in mine due to past financial issues. Everything in the basement condo that I rent is run by electricity, too, including the furnace and a weird sump pump which removes waste water from my apartment as well as the 3 condos above me. So when not powered, I can’t run ANY water, including the toilet! (There’s no back up generator so during power outages, we’ve gotten flooded –in the dark with no heat! Not to mention the food that rots in the fridge… A person can take just so much of that. This is REALLY freaking me out!
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OMG ECE that totally sucks, I am so sorry! Here’s wishing you new roommates pronto, and I hope there might be agencies you can reach out to for hep in the meantime. Perhaps even the utility might have emergency help at least on a temporary basis?
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Thanks so much for your very kind words and suggestions, bethree5!
I did call the electric company Thursday and they said I can get service if I pay a $220 security fee, which will amount to an additional $44 that’s added to my monthly bills for 5 months, and that I HAVE to pay on time every month or else… So I feel somewhat relieved about that matter, since at least my electricity isn’t getting cut off now. However, it means I’ve still got to cover what others would have paid on rent and utilities, in addition to that extra $44 each month.
I also spoke to someone at a charity that’s going to help me with the roommate matter. They referred me to other programs around here that might provide assistance, too. Some seem rather iffy though, especially one that relies on funds from HUD (another federal program that’s at-risk now). Thus there’s no full resolution yet, especially since I’m very concerned about the steep rent –and that’s incredibly stressful. So it’s not all over, but at least things are starting to come together…
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I am so sorry for your struggle. I hope you can get back on your feet soon, but sadly this administration will not be helpful. However, there may be some community groups that could help you get through the worst of these uncertain times.
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Thank you, retired teacher, for your good wishes, support and recommendations!
I have contacted a number of different community resources and what amazes me is how many that have referred me to both private and public programs which depend on funding from the federal government –as if we were still living in the America that existed prior to the election last November. It’s difficult for me to comprehend that they don’t realize what is happening to our country right now and how bleak the future is likely to be due to the current Administration, especially for the neediest populations.
This reminds me of when (I believe it was) the first Bush was president and he claimed that families and charities should be the ones taking care of needy people, not the government. It was as if he thought everyone has family that could and would help, and like most charities don’t rely on assistance from the government themselves. Since organizations that take government money are not allowed to discriminate, just charities that will help only their own people don’t take government funds –which I think is by far the minority of charities today. But people seem to be wearing blinders to avoid seeing what’s happening now –or maybe they are just crossing their fingers with the hope they’ll wake up to a different more caring America than what others can see is clearly on the way.
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Oh, and BTW, I’ve been able to at least know for sure that my Social Security Retirement Income would always arrive in my bank account by the 3rd of each month, so what’s terrifying me more than anything are the changes the unelected President Musk is currently in the process of making to Social Security. That includes especially replacing the software they use to disperse the money, because I don’t think that charities and families could possibly help the 73 million people who got SS checks last month to survive (and avoid eviction) if our checks are not accurate, dependable and dispersed on time –as they always have been: https://siliconangle.com/2025/03/28/doge-reportedly-planning-rewrite-social-security-administrations-software/ I think we’re looking at THE horror of horrors…
And I am so sick of people who think they know better and want credit for making improvements & saving money, when they really need to learn that what they’re messing with is highly valued by the masses and, “if it ain’t broke, don’t fix it.”
https://www.axios.com/2025/03/25/social-security-trump-doge-elon-how-it-works
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I wonder if we’ll make it out whole through four more years of amateur nights. CBK
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I’m scared to spend a penny. CBK
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Cut funding for government services until people complain loudly. Use that as an excuse to privatize. Rinse, repeat.
Follow the money. Bush gave the endgame away with his privatization plan.
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FYI all, from Truthout:
https://truthout.org/articles/dark-money-is-fueling-efforts-to-kill-consumer-protections-at-supreme-court/?utm_source=Truthout&utm_campaign=ad86419323-EMAIL_CAMPAIGN_2025_03_27_08_56&utm_medium=email&utm_term=0_bbb541a1db-ad86419323-652229581
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Addendum: The cards really are stacked better than ever–I remember 25 years ago trying to get the Adult Education people (a VERY big group) to stop trying to please the GOP Congress with “more research to prove you need the money you SAY you need” for real adult education and not just for job training (for corporations) and that more research was just a sinkhole–a put-off method to keep the well-meaning but unaware researchers busy as, like teachers, they worked under the false and naive idea that everyone in Congress really wanted what we best for ALL adults and, BTW, for all children.
While they did their real destructive groundwork. At least now most “get it.”
Feeling a Bit Like a Old Voice in the Wilderness Blowing Away in the Wind. BTW, I also depend on SS for my rent payment, month to month. CBK
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Finally………… I’m eligible for Survivor Benefits under the Fairness Act, after several hard years & finally I received a return call from a patient/professional/knowledgeable/caring government worker of the SSA, after waiting hours, finally at 9:23pm, finally was given a date/time for a phone interview, finally scheduled, finally in 2 weeks –
finally, finally, finally……..crossing my fingers – possibly nothing again.
These are unbelievable, yet predictable times.
THE BEST TO ALL OF US!
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Good for you! Something still works.
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Finally………… I’m eligible for Survivor Benefits under the Fairness Act, after several hard years & finally I received a return call from a patient/professional/knowledgeable/caring government worker of the SSA, after waiting hours, finally at 9:23pm, finally was given a date/time for a phone interview, finally scheduled, finally in 2 weeks –
finally, finally, finally……..crossing my fingers – possibly nothing again.
These are unbelievable, yet predictable times.
THE BEST TO ALL OF US!
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Seriously, what is the end-game here? SSA staffing/ service cuts are already hurting people; elected representatives getting flooded with anxious questions/ demands. Is the plan that somehow blocking/ interfering with SS recipients’ questions/ applications/ problem-solving is going to make the elderly public [many of them Trump voters] so upset they’ll somehow become “resigned” and endorse legislation to privatize soc sec? And how long would that take to go through (if at all) and become implemented while these folks languish? Could legislation be passed [hardly a slamdunk], implemented/ up & working before the midterms [in 1.8 yrs]?
I would imagine more a groundswell of desperate people betrayed by Trump campaign promises—a backlash for touching that “third rail.” Of the 70 million receiving soc sec income, roughly 32 million either can’t live without it, or would be in severely straitened circumstances if it were interrupted for any length of time.
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bethree5: I think or at least hope that the Pennsylvania election foreshadows a real national shift–finally. CBK
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All: I just wanted to put this out here–across-the-board relevant . . . it’s the Amapour interview with Michael Lewis on his new book about “Who is Government?” Does my heart good–what a national treasure Michael Lewis is. It should be required reading for anyone GOP/MAGA. CBK
https://www.msn.com/en-us/news/world/it-s-dumb-who-is-government-explodes-the-stereotype-of-the-wasteful-bureaucrat/vi-AA1BMVwK?ocid=msedgdhp&pc=HCTS&cvid=9bb910e1b30641c9bea8592cda5288b8&ei=85
‘It’s dumb’: ‘Who is Government?’ explodes the stereotype of the wasteful bureaucrat – MSN
In their new book, bestselling author Michael Lewis and comedian W. Kamau Bell call out “breathtaking” hypocrisy among billionaires attacking government.
http://www.msn.com
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CBK: Yes! I have been enjoying CSPAN Book TV’s “After Words” 54-min interview with Michael Lewis about his new book, watched it a couple of times. Inspiring. (find it at c-span.org, click Book TV top menu).
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Big mistake to rile the gray-hairs!!!!
This will bite the Trumpanistas’ well-padded tushies.
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Hi Bob: . . . yes, and this at a time when there are more of us than ever, we are living longer, most of us actively lived through the 60’s (and actually did go to war), and so many are keeping our minds about us–punching through the old stereotypes . . . a huge political misreading on the part of the otherwise-deranged-anyway GOP. And Trump’s dismissal of and utter disgust with veterans is coming back to bite. CBK
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