The team of young vandals assembled by Elon Musk have been given free rein to fire anyone and break contracts for any reason or no reason. They spend a few hours in a Department or agency and decide on the spur of the moment whose career to terminate, without regard to experience or knowledge. What will be left of our government when Musk and his kiddies put down their chainsaw?

In one agency that was shuttered, the team is fighting back. This is their story:

March 1, 2025

A letter to the American People:

For over 11 years, 18F has been proudly serving you to make government technology work better. We are non-partisan civil servants. 18F has worked on hundreds of projects, all designed to make government technology not just efficient but effective, and to save money for American taxpayers.

However, all employees at 18F – a group that the Trump Administration GSA Technology Transformation Services Director called “the gold standard” of civic tech – were terminated today at midnight ET.

18F was doing exactly the type of work that DOGE claims to want – yet we were eliminated.

When former Tesla engineer Thomas Shedd took the position of TTS director and met with TTS including 18F on February 3, 2025, he acknowledged that the group is the “gold standard” of civic technologists and that “you guys have been doing this far longer than I’ve been even aware that your group exists.” He repeatedly emphasized the importance of the work, and the value of the talent that the teams bring to government.

Despite that skill and knowledge, at midnight ET on March 1, the entirety of 18F received notice that our positions had been eliminated.

The letter said that 18F “has been identified as part of this phase of GSA’s Reduction in Force (RIF) as non-critical”.

“This decision was made with explicit direction from the top levels of leadership within both the Administration and GSA,” Shedd said in an email shortly after we were given notice.

This was a surprise to all 18F staff and our agency partners. Just yesterday we were working on important projects, including improving access to weather data with NOAA, making it easier and faster to get a passport with the Department of State, supporting free tax filing with the IRS, and other critical projects with organizations at the federal and state levels.

All 18F’s support on that work has now abruptly come to a halt. Since the entire staff was also placed on administrative leave, we have been locked out of our computers, and have no chance to assist in an orderly transition in our work. We don’t even have access to our personal employment data. We’re supposed to return our equipment, but can’t use our email to find out how or where.

Dismantling 18F follows the gutting of the original US Digital Service. These cuts are just the most recent in a series of a sledgehammer approach to the critical US teams supporting IT infrastructure.

Before today’s RIF, DOGE members and GSA political appointees demanded and took access to IT systems that hold sensitive information. They ignored security precautions. Some who pushed back on this questionable behavior resigned rather than grant access. Others were met with reprisals like being booted from work communication channels.

We’re not done yet.

We’re still absorbing what has happened. We’re wrestling with what it will mean for ourselves and our families, as well as the impact on our partners and the American people.

But we came to the government to fix things. And we’re not done with this work yet.

More to come.

Robert Hubbell is a blogger with a huge following. He has that following because he is well-informed, reasonable and optimistic about the power of democracy. In the absence of any coordinated response from the Democratic Party, protests are occurring spontaneously and locally. At Tesla showrooms, where people are picketing. At town hall meetings, which Republicans have suspended. And in other public settings, where people are expressing their anger and frustration about the dismantling of their government.

He wrote recently:

It is a tough time to be an ordinary American who believes in democracy, the rule of law, and the value of good government. From the cheap seats, it appears that all three are under a brutal assault from Trump and Musk designed to weaken America as a global force for good. In a bizarre twist worthy of The Twilight Zone, Trump and Musk’s campaign of destruction seems carefully crafted to benefit the world’s worst dictator and sworn enemy of American democracy, Vladimir Putin, a goal that is warmly embraced by a party that only a decade ago wrapped itself in patriotism and pro-democracy foreign policy.

But America’s political and media classes seem oddly unconcerned and detached from reality. True, Democrats in Congress express concern—but in the same way, they express concern about policy fights over revisions to the tax code. (To be fair, a handful of notable exceptions are out on a limb without the support of their party.) Our Democratic leaders use their minority status in Congress to justify their strange quiescence—an explanation that accepts defeat as the status quo.

The media is a husk of its former self. Firebrands and self-styled crusaders who took Biden to task for every inconsequential verbal slip now report on grotesque lies and unprecedented betrayals by Trump with the ennui of a weatherman predicting increasing darkness in the late afternoon and early evening.

What is wrong with these people?

Is the failure of Democratic leaders a lack of ability? Of desire? Or the triumph of personal ambition regarding 2028 presidential politics over their willingness to serve as a leader of the loyal opposition in our nation’s hour of need?

The silence is deafening. There is a grand disconnect. I had no answer for Americans abroad wondering why the deep pool of talented politicians in the Democratic Party was missing in action at a moment of crisis for their beloved country. But I was able to assure them that the grassroots movement is responding to the call without waiting for politicians to lead the way. 

Organic protests are spreading across the US, including protests targeting Tesla dealerships. See News24, ‘We are taking action’: 9 people arrested at Tesla dealership as anti-Musk protests break out in US. (“Throngs of protesters also descended on the electric vehicle maker’s showrooms in Jacksonville, Florida; Tucson, Arizona, and other cities, blocking traffic, chanting and waving signs . . . .”)

Like the Civil Rights Era in the 20th Century and the anti-war movement of the 1960s, we are experiencing a moment in our history where the people drag their leaders kicking and screaming into the future—at which point those reluctant leaders will take credit for victory. So be it. We must stop asking, “Where are our leaders?” and start doing the work until they show up to join us on the front lines.

The pattern behind Trump’s embrace of Putin in Friday’s Oval Office meeting

On Friday, Trump ended 80 years of alliance between Western nations by attacking and dishonoring the leader of the European nation on the frontlines of the effort to halt Russian expansionism. As Trump berated President Zelensky, Trump characterized himself and Vladimir Putin as “co-victims” of the US investigation into Russia’s interference in the 2016 election.

The next day, Elon Musk agreed with a tweet asserting that the US should leave NATO and the UN.

When European leaders met on Sunday in a pre-planned security conference in London, Russia’s former president Dmitry Medvedev condemned the meeting as an “anti-Trump Russophobic coven [of witches].” Medvedev speaks for Putin.

On Sunday, the NYTimes reported that the US Department of Defense has unilaterally ceased cyber operations against Russia, hobbling the US’s ability to understand Russia’s true intentions at a critical juncture in world politics.

Late last week, The Guardian reported that the US no longer views Russian cyberattacks against the US as a priority. See The GuardianTrump administration retreats in fight against Russian cyber threats. There is no indication that Russia has stopped cyberattacks against the US or that it has “de-prioritized” American cyberattacks on Russia.

In the span of 72-hours, Trump effectively surrendered to Russia in a cyberwar that has been waged continuously for decades. Trump’s disgraceful actions in the Oval Office on Friday must be viewed in the broader context of Trump’s embrace of Russia.

The media is failing to tell that broader story by trivializing a foreign relations debacle into a “Will he, or won’t he?” story about Trump’s ludicrous demand for Zelensky to “apologize.” See BBCr eport, Laura Kuenssberg, asking Zelensky if he would “express[] some regret to President Trump after your heated confrontation at the White House on Friday.”

At least the BBC reporter didn’t ask Zelensky if he would resign, which has become the new talking point for MAGA politicians in the US: Following Trump’s Lead, His Allies Lash Out At Zelenskyy And Suggest He May Need To Resign | HuffPost Latest News


DOGE hackers shut down key IT unit designed to coordinate US government public-facing computer networks

DOGE has summarily dismantled a key information technology group at the center of the federal government’s public-facing computer systems. See Josh Marshall in Talking Points Memo, In-House Gov Tech Unit for State of the Art Web Portals Disbanded by Doge.

The unit that was disbanded was known as “18F.” Its job was to make public-facing websites of the federal government more user-friendly and functional—things like making it easier to complete and file your tax returns for free on the IRS website. 

The now-former employees of 18F published a letter on Sunday that explained what they did and why their dissolution will hurt the American people. See 18F: We are dedicated to the American public and we’re not done yet. The letter reads, in part, as follows:

[The terminations were] a surprise to all 18F staff and our agency partners. Just yesterday we were working on important projects, including improving access to weather data with NOAA, making it easier and faster to get a passport with the Department of State, supporting free tax filing with the IRS, and other critical projects with organizations at the federal and state levels.

All 18F’s support on that work has now abruptly come to a halt. Since the entire staff was also placed on administrative leave, we have been locked out of our computers, and have no chance to assist in an orderly transition in our work. . . .

Before today’s RIF, DOGE members and GSA political appointees demanded and took access to IT systems that hold sensitive information. They ignored security precautions. Some who pushed back on this questionable behavior resigned rather than grant access.

The chaos-termination of the 18F computer group is being repeated across the federal government. Doge has apparently targeted 50% of the Social Security Administration staff—a move that will hurt service levels for seniors who depend on SSA payments to meet basic living expenses.

These cuts are painful and will cause chaos. That chaos and pain will spur a backlash against Republicans that should allow Democrats to take back the House (and possibly the Senate) in 2026 if only the Democratic Party can get its act together—PRONTO! We need a daily news conference with effective messaging by dynamic, charismatic leaders who are not Chuck Schumer!…

Concluding Thoughts

Apologies that this newsletter is more like a rant and less like my usual call to action. But I am reflecting the frustration and anger that I am hearing from readers (both in person and in the Comment section). There seems to be a disconnect that is exacerbating an already mind-boggling situation.

The good news is that everyone seems to “get it”—other than politicians and the media. As I noted, they will be dragged along with the tide of history—a tide whose course we will determine by our actions.

It is up to us to save democracy—a situation that does not distinguish this moment from the thousands of perilous moments that have brought us to this point.

I acknowledge that we are living through an extraordinarily difficult moment. Our most important task is to not quit. If all we do is endure and keep hope alive, that will be enough. That is what Winston Churchill did during the darkest hours of WWII. If we can do the same, we will see victory in 2026 and 2028.

But we can do more—much more. The tide is turning. Republicans are retreating from their constituents. Spontaneous protests are spreading across America. It is happening. Be part of the movement in whatever way you can. No effort is wasted. No gesture is meaningless. No voice is unheard. Everything matters—now more than ever.


Peter Green explores one of the strangest paradoxes of our time: how can people be “pro-life” and also oppose any gun control? Guns kill people. Guns kill thousands of people every year. Consistency would demand that a person who is pro-life would also want to regulate the sale of guns.

But no. Among the most zealous pro-life governors is Ron DeSantis of Florida. He doesn’t want any woman to get an abortion, regardless of the peril to her life or the fetus. But when it comes to guns, DeSantis wants everyone to have at least one.

Green writes:

This week in his State of the State speech, Ron DeSantis announced that it was time to get over the Marjorie Stoneman Douglas High School shooting–that would be the one in Parkland in which a 19-year-old killed 17 and injured 17 others in the deadliest mass shooting at a high school in US history. 

After that shooting, the state put in place a piddly excuse for an attempt to make such horrors less likely, but even that is too much for DeSantis, who specifically wants to get rid of language raising the age to purchase a shotgun or rifle from 18 to 21 and also the red flag law that lets family members or law enforcement petition the court to remove someone’s firearms id they are risk to themselves of others. You know– like maybe a 19 year old with a long history of racism and fascination with mass shootings. “We need to be a strong Second Amendment state. I know many of you agree, so let’s get some positive reform done for the people in this state of Florida,” DeSantis was quoted by the Florida Phoenix

Also, he’d like to have open carry in the state.

Because nothing is more important than an American’s God-given right to shoot other people. Because we should go to any length to “protect” a fetus, but once it’s a live child, its life is less important than someone’s right to fire off a couple of rounds at anyone that bugs them. Because this is one more way politicians can show that for all their talk, they don’t particular care about young humans. 

On the right column of the blogspot version of this blog, I have had one image parked for years. It’s not complicated

I would say that it’s the least we could do, but of course the least we can do is nothing, and Ron DeSantis would like us to get back to doing that. 

The only bright spot here is that the legislature doesn’t seem to have his back on this. Good. DeSantis should be ashamed that he can’t even produce a bad argument for his favored policies other than complaining that Florida has “lagged on this issue.” What a bummer– imagine all the people who are going to some other state because it’s easier to shoot people there. 

In this post, historian Heather Cox Richardson reminds us of the struggle to secure voting rights for Black Americans, as she commemorates the anniversary of “Bloody Sunday.” For most people, these stories are history. For me, because I am old, they are memories. in my lifetime, Black voters across the South were disenfranchised. People who advocated for civil rights, the right to vote, and racial equality put their lives at risk in the South. The KKK was active. Black churches were bombed. Civil rights leader Medger Evers was murdered while standing in his driveway.

The struggle for equal rights was violent and bloody. Yet today, we are told by our President and his allies that we shouldn’t talk about these parts of the past. It’s not patriotic. It’s “woke.” It’s DEI. It’s divisive. Let’s not talk about race anymore. Let’s all be colorblind. That’s what Dr. King wanted, wasn’t it? Cue the quote about being judged by “the content of their character, not the color of their skin.” No, that’s not what he wanted. He spoke hopefully about a future where no one was disadvantaged by the color of their skin. Where everyone had the same and equal rights. Where racism and prejudice no longer existed.

But that’s not the society we live in today. We live in a society where people of color and women are openly disparaged by the President as “DEI hires.” When race and gender are no longer reasons to belittle and demean people, then we can judge everyone by the content of their character. But that day has not arrived.

Heather Cox Richardson writes:

Black Americans outnumbered white Americans among the 29,500 people who lived in Selma, Alabama, in the 1960s, but the city’s voting rolls were 99% white. So in 1963, Black organizers in the Dallas County Voters League launched a drive to get Black voters in Selma registered. The Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee, a prominent civil rights organization, joined them.

In 1964, Congress passed the Civil Rights Act, but the measure did not adequately address the problem of voter suppression. In Selma a judge had stopped the voter registration protests by issuing an injunction prohibiting public gatherings of more than two people.

To call attention to the crisis in her city, Amelia Boynton, a member of the Dallas County Voters League acting with a group of local activists, traveled to Birmingham to invite Reverend Martin Luther King Jr. to the city. King had become a household name after delivering his “I Have a Dream” speech at the 1963 March on Washington, and his presence would bring national attention to Selma’s struggle.

King and other prominent members of the Southern Christian Leadership Conference arrived in January to push the voter registration drive. For seven weeks, Black residents tried to register to vote. County Sheriff James Clark arrested almost 2,000 of them on a variety of charges, including contempt of court and parading without a permit. A federal court ordered Clark not to interfere with orderly registration, so he forced Black applicants to stand in line for hours before taking a “literacy” test. Not a single person passed.

Then on February 18, white police officers, including local police, sheriff’s deputies, and Alabama state troopers, beat and shot an unarmed 26-year-old, Jimmie Lee Jackson, who was marching for voting rights at a demonstration in his hometown of Marion, Alabama, about 25 miles northwest of Selma. Jackson had run into a restaurant for shelter along with his mother when the police started rioting, but they chased him and shot him in the restaurant’s kitchen.

Jackson died eight days later, on February 26.

The leaders of the Southern Christian Leadership Conference in Selma decided to defuse the community’s anger by planning a long march—54 miles—from Selma to the state capitol at Montgomery to draw attention to the murder and voter suppression. Expecting violence, the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee voted not to participate, but its chair, John Lewis, asked their permission to go along on his own. They agreed.

On March 7, 1965, sixty years ago today, the marchers set out. As they crossed the Edmund Pettus Bridge, named for a Confederate brigadier general, Grand Dragon of the Alabama Ku Klux Klan, and U.S. senator who stood against Black rights, state troopers and other law enforcement officers met the unarmed marchers with billy clubs, bullwhips, and tear gas. They fractured John Lewis’s skull and beat Amelia Boynton unconscious. A newspaper photograph of the 54-year-old Boynton, seemingly dead in the arms of another marcher, illustrated the depravity of those determined to stop Black voting.

Images of “Bloody Sunday” on the national news mesmerized the nation, and supporters began to converge on Selma. King, who had been in Atlanta when the marchers first set off, returned to the fray.

Two days later, the marchers set out again. Once again, the troopers and police met them at the end of the Edmund Pettus Bridge, but this time, King led the marchers in prayer and then took them back to Selma. That night, a white mob beat to death a Unitarian Universalist minister, James Reeb, who had come from Massachusetts to join the marchers.

On March 15, President Lyndon B. Johnson addressed a nationally televised joint session of Congress to ask for the passage of a national voting rights act. “Their cause must be our cause too,” he said. “[A]ll of us…must overcome the crippling legacy of bigotry and injustice. And we shall overcome.” Two days later, he submitted to Congress proposed voting rights legislation.

The marchers remained determined to complete their trip to Montgomery, but Alabama’s governor, George Wallace, refused to protect them. So President Johnson stepped in. When the marchers set off for a third time on March 21, 1,900 members of the nationalized Alabama National Guard, FBI agents, and federal marshals protected them. Covering about ten miles a day, they camped in the yards of well-wishers until they arrived at the Alabama State Capitol on March 25. Their ranks had grown as they walked until they numbered about 25,000 people.

On the steps of the capitol, speaking under a Confederate flag, Dr. King said: “The end we seek is a society at peace with itself, a society that can live with its conscience. And that will be a day not of the white man, not of the black man. That will be the day of man as man.”

That night, Viola Liuzzo, a 39-year-old mother of five who had arrived from Michigan to help after Bloody Sunday, was murdered by four Ku Klux Klan members who tailed her as she ferried demonstrators out of the city.

On August 6, Dr. King and Mrs. Boynton were guests of honor as President Johnson signed the Voting Rights Act of 1965. Recalling “the outrage of Selma,” Johnson said: “This right to vote is the basic right without which all others are meaningless. It gives people, people as individuals, control over their own destinies.”

The Voting Rights Act authorized federal supervision of voter registration in districts where African Americans were historically underrepresented. Johnson promised that the government would strike down “regulations, or laws, or tests to deny the right to vote.” He called the right to vote “the most powerful instrument ever devised by man for breaking down injustice and destroying the terrible walls which imprison men because they are different from other men,” and pledged that “we will not delay, or we will not hesitate, or we will not turn aside until Americans of every race and color and origin in this country have the same right as all others to share in the process of democracy.”

As recently as 2006, Congress reauthorized the Voting Rights Act by a bipartisan vote. By 2008 there was very little difference in voter participation between white Americans and Americans of color. In that year, voters elected the nation’s first Black president, Barack Obama, and they reelected him in 2012. And then, in 2013, the Supreme Court’s Shelby County v. Holder decision struck down the part of the Voting Rights Act that required jurisdictions with a history of racial discrimination in voting to get approval from the federal government before changing their voting rules. This requirement was known as “preclearance.”

The Shelby County v. Holder decision opened the door, once again, for voter suppression. A 2024 study by the Brennan Center of nearly a billion vote records over 14 years showed that the racial voting gap is growing almost twice as fast in places that used to be covered by the preclearance requirement. Another recent study showed that in Alabama, the gap between white and Black voter turnout in the 2024 election was the highest since at least 2008. If nonwhite voters in Alabama had voted at the same rate as white voters, more than 200,000 additional ballots would have been cast.

Democrats have tried since 2021 to pass a voting rights act but have been stymied by Republicans, who oppose such protections. On March 5, 2025, Representative Terri Sewall (D-AL) reintroduced the John R. Lewis Voting Rights Advancement Act, which would help restore the terms of the Voting Rights Act, and make preclearance national.

The measure is named after John Lewis, the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee leader whose skull law enforcement officers fractured on the Edmund Pettus Bridge. Lewis went on from his days in the Civil Rights Movement to serve 17 terms as a representative from Georgia. Until he died in 2020, Lewis bore the scars of March 7, 1965: Bloody Sunday.

A prominent diplomat lost his job because of a comment about Trump. He said out loud what most of us have known for years: Trump doesn’t know much about history. His world is centered on himself and his giant ego. Whenever he refers to events that preceded his own life, he draws a blank. One well-known example was his reference to famed 19th century abolitionist Frederick Douglass as “an example of somebody who’s done an amazing job and is being recognized more and more.” It was obvious that he had no idea who Douglass was. What made it even more embarrassing was that he was speaking to his African-American supporters at a breakfast honoring Black History month. They knew who Frederick Douglass was.

The BBC reported:

New Zealand has fired its most senior envoy to the United Kingdom over remarks that questioned US President Donald Trump’s grasp of history.

At an event in London on Tuesday, High Commissioner Phil Goff compared efforts to end the war between Russia and Ukraine to the 1938 Munich Agreement, which allowed Adolf Hitler to annex part of Czechoslovakia.

Mr Goff recalled how Sir Winston Churchill had criticised the agreement, then said of the US leader: “President Trump has restored the bust of Churchill to the Oval Office. But do you think he really understands history?”

His comments were “deeply disappointing” and made his position “untenable”, New Zealand’s Foreign Minister Winston Peters said.

His comments came after Trump paused military aid to Kyiv following a heated exchange with Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky in the Oval Office last week.

He contrasted Trump with Churchill who, while estranged from the British government, spoke against the Munich Agreement as he saw it as a surrender to Nazi Germany’s threats. 

Mr Goff quoted how Churchill had rebuked then UK Prime Minister Neville Chamberlain: “You had the choice between war and dishonour. You chose dishonour, yet you will have war.”

Peters said Mr Goff’s views did not represent those of the New Zealand government…

Former Prime Minister Helen Clark was among those who criticised Mr Goff’s sacking, saying it was backed by a “very thin excuse”.

“I have been at Munich Security Conference recently where many draw parallels between Munich 1938 and US actions now,” she wrote in a post on X.

Under the 1938 Munich Agreement, Hitler took control of Czechoslovakia’s Sudetenland. The deal failed to stop Nazi Germany from advancing deeper into Europe and World War Two began when he invaded Poland in 1939.

Under the direct command of Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth, the Defense Department is purging thousands of images that violate Trump’s order to remove any reference to Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion. Trump wants to eliminate anything that references LGBT issues, as well as images that call attention to women or African Americans.

Why ban any images if the airplane that dropped the atomic bomb on Hiroshima? It’s not because of moral revulsion or shame but because of the airplane’s offensive name: Ebola Gay. Can’t say “gay,” even it refers to an airplane. Open the link to see the censored images. Deleting them is the height of stupidity.

The AP reported:

WASHINGTON (AP) — References to a World War II Medal of Honor recipient, the Enola Gay aircraft that dropped an atomic bomb on Japan and the first women to pass Marine infantry training are among the tens of thousands of photos and online posts marked for deletion as the Defense Department works to purge diversity, equity and inclusion content, according to a database obtained by The Associated Press.

The database, which was confirmed by U.S. officials and published by AP, includes more than 26,000 images that have been flagged for removal across every military branch. But the eventual total could be much higher.

One official, who spoke on condition of anonymity to provide details that have not been made public, said the purge could delete as many as 100,000 images or posts in total, when considering social media pages and other websites that are also being culled for DEI content. The official said it’s not clear if the database has been finalized.

Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth had given the military until Wednesday to remove content that highlights diversity efforts in its ranks following President Donald Trump’s executive order ending those programs across the federal government.

The vast majority of the Pentagon purge targets women and minorities, including notable milestones made in the military. And it also removes a large number of posts that mention various commemorative months — such as those for Black and Hispanic people and women.

In this image provided by the U.S. Air Force, armorers and other ground personnel undergo training at Chanute Field, Ill., during World War II (U.S. Air Force via AP)

In this image provided by the U.S. Air Force, armorers and other ground personnel undergo training at Chanute Field, Ill., during World War II (U.S. Air Force via AP)

But a review of the database also underscores the confusion that has swirled among agencies about what to remove following Trump’s order.

Aircraft and fish projects are flagged

In some cases, photos seemed to be flagged for removal simply because their file included the word ”gay,” including service members with that last name and an image of the B-29 aircraft Enola Gay, which dropped the first atomic bomb on Hiroshima, Japan, during World War II. 

In this image provided by the U.S. Air Force, Staff Sgt. Krysteena Scales, a 816th Expeditionary Airlift Squadron Flying Crew Chief, performs pre-flight checks before departing on a mission in a C-17 Globemaster III, March 19, 2009, at an undisclosed location in Southwest Asia. (Senior Airman Andrew Satran/U.S. Air Force via AP)

In this image provided by the U.S. Air Force, Staff Sgt. Krysteena Scales, a 816th Expeditionary Airlift Squadron Flying Crew Chief, performs pre-flight checks before departing on a mission in a C-17 Globemaster III, March 19, 2009, at an undisclosed location in Southwest Asia. (Senior Airman Andrew Satran/U.S. Air Force via AP)Read More

Several photos of an Army Corps of Engineers dredging project in California were marked for deletion, apparently because a local engineer in the photo had the last name Gay. And a photo of Army Corps biologists was on the list, seemingly because it mentioned they were recording data about fish — including their weight, size, hatchery and gender.

In addition, some photos of the Tuskegee Airmen, the nation’s first Black military pilots who served in a segregated WWII unit, were listed on the database, but those may likely be protected due to historical content.

The Air Force briefly removed new recruit training courses that included videos of the Tuskegee Airmen soon after Trump’s order. That drew the White House’s ire over “malicious compliance,” and the Air Force quickly reversed the removal.

Many of the images listed in the database already have been removed. Others were still visible Thursday, and it’s not clear if they will be taken down at some point or be allowed to stay, including images with historical significance such as those of the Tuskegee Airmen.

This image provided by the U.S. Marine Corps shows World War II Medal of Honor recipient Pfc. Harold Gonsalves during World War II. (U.S. Marine Corps via AP)

This image provided by the U.S. Marine Corps shows World War II Medal of Honor recipient Pfc. Harold Gonsalves during World War II. (U.S. Marine Corps via AP)

Asked about the database, Pentagon spokesman John Ullyot said in a statement, “We are pleased by the rapid compliance across the Department with the directive removing DEI content from all platforms. In the rare cases that content is removed that is out of the clearly outlined scope of the directive, we instruct components accordingly.”

He noted that Hegseth has declared that “DEI is dead” and that efforts to put one group ahead of another through DEI programs erodes camaraderie and threatens mission execution. 

Some images aren’t gone

In some cases, the removal was partial. The main page in a post titled “Women’s History Month: All-female crew supports warfighters” was removed. But at least one of the photos in that collection about an all-female C-17 crew could still be accessed. A shot from the Army Corps of Engineers titled “Engineering pioneer remembered during Black History Month” was deleted.

Other photos flagged in the database but still visible Thursday included images of the World War II Women Air Service Pilots and one of U.S. Air Force Col. Jeannie Leavitt, the country’s first female fighter pilot. 

Also still visible was an image of then-Pfc. Christina Fuentes Montenegro becoming one of the first three women to graduate from the Marine Corps’ Infantry Training Battalion and an image of Marine Corps World War II Medal of Honor recipient Pfc. Harold Gonsalves. 

It was unclear why some other images were removed, such as a Marine Corps photo titled “Deadlift contenders raise the bar pound by pound” or a National Guard website image called “Minnesota brothers reunite in Kuwait.” 

Why the database?

The database of the 26,000 images was created to conform with federal archival laws, so if the services are queried in the future, they can show how they are complying with the law, the U.S. official said. But it may be difficult to ensure the content was archived because the responsibility to ensure each image was preserved was the responsibility of each individual unit.

This whole project is stupid.

Reporters at The New York Times pored through 5,000 pages from various federal agencies and found that the following words had been removed from government websites and publications. As the article points out, Trump and Musk frequently claim to be champions of “free speech,” but they have no problem censoring words and ideas that offend them.

Karen YourishAnnie DanielSaurabh DatarIsaac White andd Lazaro Gamio wrote:

As President Trump seeks to purge the federal government of “woke” initiatives, agencies have flagged hundreds of words to limit or avoid, according to a compilation of government documents.

  • accessible
  • activism
  • activists
  • advocacy
  • advocate
  • advocates
  • affirming care
  • all-inclusive
  • allyship
  • anti-racism
  • antiracist
  • assigned at birth
  • assigned female at birth
  • assigned male at birth
  • at risk
  • barrier
  • barriers
  • belong
  • bias
  • biased
  • biased toward
  • biases
  • biases towards
  • biologically female
  • biologically male
  • BIPOC
  • Black
  • breastfeed + people
  • breastfeed + person
  • chestfeed + people
  • chestfeed + person
  • clean energy
  • climate crisis
  • climate science
  • commercial sex worker
  • community diversity
  • community equity
  • confirmation bias
  • cultural competence
  • cultural differences
  • cultural heritage
  • cultural sensitivity
  • culturally appropriate
  • culturally responsive
  • DEI
  • DEIA
  • DEIAB
  • DEIJ
  • disabilities
  • disability
  • discriminated
  • discrimination
  • discriminatory
  • disparity
  • diverse
  • diverse backgrounds
  • diverse communities
  • diverse community
  • diverse group
  • diverse groups
  • diversified
  • diversify
  • diversifying
  • diversity
  • enhance the diversity
  • enhancing diversity
  • environmental quality
  • equal opportunity
  • equality
  • equitable
  • equitableness
  • equity
  • ethnicity
  • excluded
  • exclusion
  • expression
  • female
  • females
  • feminism
  • fostering inclusivity
  • GBV
  • gender
  • gender based
  • gender based violence
  • gender diversity
  • gender identity
  • gender ideology
  • gender-affirming care
  • genders
  • Gulf of Mexico
  • hate speech
  • health disparity
  • health equity
  • hispanic minority
  • historically
  • identity
  • immigrants
  • implicit bias
  • implicit biases
  • inclusion
  • inclusive
  • inclusive leadership
  • inclusiveness
  • inclusivity
  • increase diversity
  • increase the diversity
  • indigenous community
  • inequalities
  • inequality
  • inequitable
  • inequities
  • inequity
  • injustice
  • institutional
  • intersectional
  • intersectionality
  • key groups
  • key people
  • key populations
  • Latinx
  • LGBT
  • LGBTQ
  • marginalize
  • marginalized
  • men who have sex with men
  • mental health
  • minorities
  • minority
  • most risk
  • MSM
  • multicultural
  • Mx
  • Native American
  • non-binary
  • nonbinary
  • oppression
  • oppression
  • oppressive
  • orientation
  • people + uterus
  • people-centered care
  • person-centered
  • person-centered care
  • polarization
  • political
  • pollution
  • pregnant people
  • pregnant person
  • pregnant persons
  • prejudice
  • privilege
  • privileges
  • promote diversity
  • promoting diversity
  • pronoun
  • pronouns
  • prostitute
  • race
  • race and ethnicity
  • racial
  • racial diversity
  • racial identity
  • racial inequality
  • racial justice
  • racially
  • racism
  • segregation
  • sense of belonging
  • sex
  • sexual preferences
  • sexuality
  • social justice
  • sociocultural
  • socioeconomic
  • status
  • stereotype
  • stereotypes
  • systemic
  • systemically
  • they/them
  • trans
  • transgender
  • transsexual
  • trauma
  • traumatic
  • tribal
  • unconscious bias
  • underappreciated
  • underprivileged
  • underrepresentation
  • underrepresented
  • underserved
  • undervalued
  • victim
  • victims
  • vulnerable populations
  • women
  • women and underrepresented
  • Notes: Some terms listed with a plus sign represent combinations of words that, when used together, acknowledge transgender people, which is not in keeping with the current federal government’s position that there are only two, immutable sexes. Any term collected above was included on at least one agency’s list, which does not necessarily imply that other agencies are also discouraged from using it.
  • The above terms appeared in government memos, in official and unofficial agency guidance and in other documents viewed by The New York Times. Some ordered the removal of these words from public-facing websites, or ordered the elimination of other materials (including school curricula) in which they might be included.

  • In other cases, federal agency managers advised caution in the terms’ usage without instituting an outright ban. Additionally, the presence of some terms was used to automatically flag for review some grant proposals and contracts that could conflict with Mr. Trump’s executive orders.

  • The list is most likely incomplete. More agency memos may exist than those seen by New York Times reporters, and some directives are vague or suggest what language might be impermissible without flatly stating it.

  • All presidential administrations change the language used in official communications to reflect their own policies. It is within their prerogative, as are amendments to or the removal of web pages, which The Times has found has already happened thousands of times in this administration.

  • Still, the words and phrases listed here represent a marked — and remarkable — shift in the corpus of language being used both in the federal government’s corridors of power and among its rank and file. They are an unmistakable reflection of this administration’s priorities.

  • For example, the Trump administration has frequently framed diversity, equity and inclusion efforts as being inherently at odds with what it has identified as “merit,” and it has argued that these initiatives have resulted in the elevation of unqualified or undeserving people. That rhetorical strategy — with its baked-in assumption of a lack of capacity in people of color, women, the disabled and other marginalized groups — has been criticized as discriminatory.

Haha. That “rhetorical strategy,” assuming that those groups are incompetent has not only been “criticized as discriminatory.” IT IS DISCRIMINATORY!

Heather Cox Richardson sums up the dizzying events of the past few days. It’s hard to keep track of the array of court orders, overturned, affirmed, or Elon Musk emails, warning government employees to answer or resign, or tariffs, announced, then paused, then announced, then paused again. Is Trump’s intent to dazzle us with nonstop dung?

Trump has disrupted the Western alliance, having made common cause with Putin in his unprovoked and brutal war on Ukraine. Trump is destabilizing not only our alliances with other nations but our government as well. He has approved of draconian cuts to every department, ordered by Elon Musk or his team of kids. The determination to cut 80,000 jobs at the Veterans Administration, most held by veterans, may be a wake-up call for Republicans.

This country is in desperate trouble. When will Republicans in Congress stand up for the Constitutionand stop the madness?

She writes:

This morning, Ted Hesson and Kristina Cooke of Reuters reported that the Trump administration is preparing to deport the 240,000 Ukrainians who fled Russia’s attacks on Ukraine and have temporary legal status in the United States. Foreign affairs journalist Olga Nesterova reminded Americans that “these people had to be completely financially independent, pay tax, pay all fees (around $2K) and have an affidavit from an American person to even come here.”

“This has nothing to do with strategic necessity or geopolitics,” Russia specialist Tom Nichols posted. “This is just cruelty to show [Russian president Vladimir] Putin he has a new American ally.”

The Trump administration’s turn away from traditional European alliances and toward Russia will have profound effects on U.S. standing in the world. Edward Wong and Mark Mazzetti reported in the New York Times today that senior officials in the State Department are making plans to close a dozen consulates, mostly in Western Europe, including consulates in Florence, Italy; Strasbourg, France; Hamburg, Germany; and Ponta Delgada, Portugal, as well as a consulate in Brazil and another in Turkey.

In late February, Nahal Toosi reported in Politicothat President Donald Trump wants to “radically shrink” the State Department and to change its mission from diplomacy and soft power initiatives that advance democracy and human rights to focusing on transactional agreements with other governments and promoting foreign investment in the U.S.

Elon Musk and the “Department of Government Efficiency” have taken on the process of cutting the State Department budget by as much as 20%, and cutting at least some of the department’s 80,000 employees. As part of that project, DOGE’s Edward Coristine, known publicly as “Big Balls,” is embedded at the State Department.

As the U.S. retreats from its engagement with the world, China has been working to forge greater ties. China now has more global diplomatic posts than the U.S. and plays a stronger role in international organizations. Already in 2025, about 700 employees, including 450 career diplomats, have resigned from the State Department, a number that normally would reflect a year’s resignations.

Shutting embassies will hamper not just the process of fostering goodwill, but also U.S. intelligence, as embassies house officers who monitor terrorism, infectious disease, trade, commerce, militaries, and government, including those from the intelligence community. U.S. intelligence has always been formidable, but the administration appears to be weakening it.

As predicted, Trump’s turn of the U.S. toward Russia also means that allies are concerned he or members of his administration will share classified intelligence with Russia, thus exposing the identities of their operatives. They are considering new protocols for sharing information with the United States. The Five Eyes alliance between Australia, Canada, New Zealand, the United Kingdom and the U.S. has been formidable since World War II and has been key to countering first the Soviet Union and then Russia. Allied governments are now considering withholding information about sources or analyses from the U.S.

Their concern is likely heightened by the return to Trump’s personal possession of the boxes of documents containing classified information the FBI recovered in August 2022 from Mar-a-Lago. Trump took those boxes back from the Department of Justice and flew them back to Mar-a-Lago on February 28.

A CBS News/YouGov poll from February 26–28 showed that only 4% of the American people sided with Russia in its ongoing war with Ukraine.

The unpopularity of the new administration’s policies is starting to show. National Republican Congressional Committee chair Richard Hudson (R-NC) told House Republicans on Tuesday to stop holding town halls after several such events have turned raucous as attendees complained about the course of the Trump administration. Trump has blamed paid “troublemakers” for the agitation, and claimed the disruptions are part of the Democrats’ “game.” “[B]ut just like our big LANDSLIDE ELECTION,” he posted on social media, “it’s not going to work for them!”

More Americans voted for someone other than Trump than voted for him.

Even aside from the angry protests, DOGE is running into trouble. In his speech before a joint session of Congress on Tuesday, Trump referred to DOGE and said it “is headed by Elon Musk, who is in the gallery tonight.” In a filing in a lawsuit against DOGE and Musk, the White House declared that Musk is neither in charge of DOGE nor an employee of it. When pressed, the White House claimed on February 26 that the acting administrator of DOGE is staffer Amy Gleason. Immediately after Trump’s statement, the plaintiffs in that case asked permission to add Trump’s statement to their lawsuit.

Musk has claimed to have found billions of dollars of waste or fraud in the government, and Trump and the White House have touted those statements. But their claims to have found massive savings have been full of errors, and most of their claims have been disproved. DOGE has already had to retract five of its seven biggest claims. As for “savings,” the government spent about $710 billion in the first month of Trump’s term, compared with about $630 billion during the same timeframe last year.

Instead of showing great savings, DOGE’s claims reveal just how poorly Musk and his team understand the work of the federal government. After forcing employees out of their positions, they have had to hire back individuals who are, in fact, crucial to the nation, including the people guarding the U.S. nuclear stockpile. In his Tuesday speech, Trump claimed that the DOGE team had found “$8 million for making mice transgender,” and added: “This is real.”

Except it’s not. The mice in question were not “transgender”; they were “transgenic,” which means they are genetically altered for use in scientific experiments to learn more about human health. For comparison, S.V. Date noted in HuffPost that in just his first month in office, Trump spent about $10.7 million in taxpayer money playing golf.

Josh Marshall of Talking Points Memo pointed out today that people reporting on the individual cuts to U.S. scientific and health-related grants are missing the larger picture: “DOGE and Donald Trump are trying to shut down advanced medical research, especially cancer research, in the United States…. They’re shutting down medicine/disease research in the federal government and the government-run and funded ecosystem of funding for most research throughout the United States. It’s not hyperbole. That’s happening.”

Republicans are starting to express some concern about Musk and DOGE. As soon as Trump took office, Musk and his DOGE team took over the Office of Personnel Management, and by February 14 they had begun a massive purge of federal workers. As protests of the cuts began, Trump urged Musk on February 22 to be “more aggressive” in cutting the government, prompting Musk to demand that all federal employees explain what they had accomplished in the past week under threat of firing. That request sparked a struggle in the executive branch as cabinet officers told the employees in their departments to ignore Musk. Then, on February 27, U.S. District Judge William Alsup found that the firings were likely illegal and temporarily halted them.

On Tuesday, Senate majority leader John Thune (R-SD) weighed in on the conflict when he told CNN that the power to hire and fire employees properly belongs to Cabinet secretaries.

Yesterday, Musk met with Republican— but no Democratic— members of Congress. Senators reportedly asked Musk—an unelected bureaucrat whose actions are likely illegal—to tell them more about what’s going on. According to Liz Goodwin, Marianna Sotomayor, and Theodoric Meyer of the Washington Post, Musk gave some of the senators his phone number and said he wanted to set up a direct line for them when they have questions, allowing them to get a near-instant response to their concerns.” Senator Lindsey Graham (R-SC) told reporters that Musk told the senators he would “create a system where members of Congress can call some central group” to get cuts they dislike reversed.

This whole exchange is bonkers. The Constitution gives Congress alone the power to make appropriations and pass the laws that decide how money is spent. Josh Marshall asks: “How on earth are we in this position where members of Congress, the ones who write the budget, appropriate and assign the money, now have to go hat in hand to beg for changes or even information from the guy who actually seems to be running the government?”

Later, Musk met with House Republicans and offered to set up a similar way for the members of the House Oversight DOGE Subcommittee to reach him. When representatives complained about the random cuts that were so upsetting constituents. Musk defended DOGE’s mistakes by saying that he “can’t bat a thousand all the time.”

This morning, U.S. District Judge John McConnell Jr. ruled in favor of a group of state attorneys general from 22 Democratic states and the District of Columbia, saying that Trump does not have the authority to freeze funding appropriated by Congress. McConnell wrote that the spending freeze “fundamentally undermines the distinct constitutional roles of each branch of our government.” As Joyce White Vance explained in Civil Discourse, McConnell issued a preliminary injunction that will stay in place until the case, called New York v. Trump, works its way through the courts. The injunction applies only in the states that sued, though, leaving Republican-dominated states out in the cold.

Today, Trump convened his cabinet and, with Musk present, told the secretaries that they, and not Musk, are in charge of their departments. Dasha Burns and Kyle Cheney of Politicoreported that Trump told the secretaries that Musk only has the power to make recommendations, not to make staffing or policy decisions.

Trump is also apparently feeling pressure over his tariffs of 25% on goods from Canada and Mexico and an additional 10% on imports from China that went into effect on Tuesday, which economists warned would create inflation and cut economic growth. Today, Trump first said he would exempt car and truck parts from the tariffs, then expanded exemptions to include goods covered by the U.S.-Mexico-Canada trade agreement (USMCA) Trump signed in his first term. Administration officials say other tariffs will go into effect at different times in the future.

The stock market has dropped dramatically over the past three days owing to both the tariffs and the uncertainty over their implementation. But Trump denied his abrupt change had anything to do with the stock market.

“I’m not even looking at the market,” Trump said, “because long term, the United States will be very strong with what’s happening.”

Ezra Klein has a wildly popular podcast. My grandson, a college freshman, tells me that Ezra Klein is like a deity to many in his generation. In this episode, he talks with Kara Swisher, who has been covering Wlon Musk and the tech sector for years. I think you will find their discussion highly informative.

This is an edited transcript of an episode of “The Ezra Klein Show.” You can listen to the conversation by following or subscribing to the show on the NYT Audio AppAppleSpotifyAmazon MusicYouTubeiHeartRadio or wherever you get your podcasts.

Ezra Klein begins the conversation:

At the beginning, Elon Musk’s Department of Government Efficiency seemed to have a fairly narrow mandate. The Trump executive order creating it says that the purpose of D.O.G.E. is “modernizing federal technology and software to maximize governmental efficiency and productivity.”

But in the last couple of weeks, it has become clear that Musk’s role is a whole lot larger than that. He has gained access to information technology systems, dismantled the U.S. Agency for International Development and unleashed a fire hose of attacks on his platform, X, accusing the bureaucracy of various conspiratorial crimes.

And so far, at least, Musk’s patron, Donald Trump, seems to be on board.

Archived clip of Donald Trump: I think he’s doing a great job. He’s a smart guy, very smart, and he’s very much into cutting the budget of our federal government.

As I’ve watched all this unfold, I’ve been wondering how Elon Musk has evolved: How did he go from a conventional Obama-era liberal who worried about climate change and wanted to go to Mars to a right-wing conspiratorial meme lord, working to elect the far-right in Germany and shred the federal government in the United States?

What led to this evolution for Elon Musk? And what actual strategies is he bringing to the government that he now seems to have quite a lot of control over?

To talk about all this, I wanted to invite Kara Swisher on the show. Kara is one of the great tech reporters of this age. She’s been covering Musk for many years, along with many of the other tech chief executives who have become such key political figures now. She’s, of course, a host of the great podcasts “On With Kara Swisher” and “Pivot,” which she co-hosts with Scott Galloway, as well as the author of “Burn Book: A Tech Love Story.

Ezra Klein: Kara Swisher, welcome back to the show….

Good to see you.

How would you describe the role Elon Musk has been playing in the federal government in the first weeks of Donald Trump’s second term?

Well, a little more strongly than The New York Times did. They’re sort of treating it like: Isn’t this an interesting person walking through? I think he’s a one-man show. Wrecking ball, really. And he’s being used by Trump for that purpose.

He’s — there are lots of ways you could use metaphors. You could say junkyard dog. He’s the one sort of taking all the flak, going in and breaking things. But you could be funny and call him Wreck-It Ralph. I don’t think it’s particularly funny or the right way to do it or constitutionally sound.

He’s going in there like he does with his companies and doing the exact same thing. He’s got a series of moves that he makes every single time. And he’s doing them writ large on the federal government.

Walk me through the moves. What is his playbook?

It has morphed over the years. But there’s always a massive amount of drama centered on him. That tends to be the thing he does. He can be very dramatic in a very poignant way.

There was a period where he was very worried about the fate of Tesla, and he was sleeping on the floor there. And he gave an interview to The New York Times where he seemed to cry. He seemed very emotional. And at one point when we were talking — this was, I think, off-camera — he said: If Tesla doesn’t survive, the human race is doomed.

Which I felt was a little dramatic. And I thought: Wow, this is a man in his 40s who thinks that he’s the center of the universe. So it always has that element of drama.

I think he’s greatly informed by video games. Someone described him to me as Ready Player One, and everybody else is an N.P.C. — a nonplayer character. He always has to be the hero or the person who matters the most. Sometimes he does, and sometimes he has engineered it — getting the founder role when he’s not actually the founder or rewriting history or using public relations to make himself the founder.

He understands the hero’s journey kind of thing rather well. Also the stakes have to be very high, and if it doesn’t work, we’re doomed. He tends to overstate problems. Most companies have problems, but: Everything is a disaster here, and I’m here to fix it. Or: Everything sucks, and everybody previously is criminal or evil or “pedophiles.” A word he likes to use a lot.

In one tweet, he called Yoel Roth, who was head of trust and safety at Twitter, “evil.” And said that I was “filled with seething hate” — which is really dramatic and ridiculous. I’m not seething with hate.

Very Trumpian.

Yes, that kind of thing. I think he means it, though. Trump sometimes is just doing it for show — a reality show kind of thing.

One thing we’re seeing right now with Musk in the federal government is an identification of choke points of information and money: the Treasury payment system, the Office of Personnel Management, which is a place where Musk has installed trusted aides. And they’re using that as a way to fan out across the federal work force.

Beneath the grand narrative Musk tells, when he takes things over, what does he actually have the people under him do? What is the theory of action?

He has people around him who are just enablers. All these Silicon Valley people do. All his minions. And they are minions — they’re all lesser than he is in some fashion, and they all look up to him. They’re typically younger. They laugh at his jokes. Sometimes when he apologizes for a joke, which is not very often, he’ll say that the people around him thought it was funny.

When he was being interviewed at Code Conference once, he had a couple of them there. He told a really bad joke, and they all went like: Ha-ha-ha-ha. And I was like: That’s not funny — I’m sorry, did I miss the joke? And they looked at me like I had three heads.

What they do is — it’s not that hard to figure out choke points. They go into it in this way that is violating of typical rules. And I don’t mean necessarily laws — although I suspect many laws may have been broken here. But not caring about breaking laws.

So they go in full force and question: Let me see your code. Why can’t we get in? We’re getting in. We have the law. We have federal marshals. Let’s see what they’ll do.

That is a really big quality that Musk has: Let’s say things and wait for them to sue us or wait for them to stop us. They won’t stop us.

Again, very much like Trump: The people don’t stop you.

We just operate on a set of polite rules in society, and they just barrel right through them.

I want to zoom in on that breaking of rules. I think something Musk understands — and that Trump has understood in different ways — is that at high levels of society, the recourse for breaking a law or a rule is legal. You don’t get frog-marched out, typically. What happens instead is that somebody sues you.

But they need to have standing, and it works its way through the courts. It all moves slowly.

So a lot of law following and rule following is just a norm at that level. You follow the laws, and you follow the rules. If you don’t, you can move much faster than the courts are likely to move.

They can fire all these people — many of them potentially illegally, given civil service protections. And then what? They’re going to sue over the course of six to nine months or four years — and maybe get some back pay. Corporations do this against people organizing unions all the time.

But a lot of what has constrained other executive branches is not actually a constraint. Because by the time the legal system catches up, you’ve already achieved what you want to achieve. It’s a pretty profound insight.

Yes, it is. And if he gets caught, he’s willing to pay. He’s willing to go toe-to-toe legally. And I think where a lot of people are is: I don’t want to fight this guy. He has unlimited money.

Journalists have to think twice. It’s very similar to these media companies settling: CBS has done nothing wrong in this Kamala Harris situation, and yet they’re going to pay. It’s pretty clear that Meta did nothing wrong with Trump, and yet they’re going to pay. You do it to make it go away, or you don’t do it at all because of the exhaustion. And he understands that he can wear them down.

So it is true. If you blow lights, you mostly get away with it, right? You don’t always get caught. Or if you don’t pay bills. Or in his business life: Let’s blow up 90 rockets, because the 91st will work. And that’s his attitude toward pretty much everything, as far as I can tell.

Although to be fair to him, it has led to some amazing rockets.

It did. But who else gets to? Then he insults NASA. NASA can’t blow up rockets, because if they blow up one rocket, that’s the end of it. So it’s a real advantage to be able to blow up rockets and then keep going.

There’s a famous Thomas Edison quote that they all repeat back to me: I have not failed, I’ve found 10,000 ways that don’t work.

Whatever. It’s part of the ethos of tech that there’s no such thing as failure. There’s only: It didn’t work that time, and I’ll get the right one next.

But this gets to, I think, the deeper question here. There are all these tactics and strategies. But toward what?

When he was blowing up rockets, he was trying to make rockets that work in a certain way. And eventually he did, and I think the world, frankly, is better off for him doing it.

Tesla had many failures but really did make better electric cars than anybody else and helped the electric vehicle transition happen.

What does he want now, though? What, in your view, is the vision he’s trying to effectuate with all this power that he now wields in the government?

It’s not money. I hate to say this, but it’s not that important to many of them. Some of them really like money, that’s for sure. But it’s the power that money brings, and it’s the power to decide.

I think it started off with: I have some good ideas, and I’d like to put them into place. And now it’s: I have all the ideas on every topic, and therefore what I say goes.

It’s a very kinglike attitude toward things: Screw Congress, screw the courts. We should have a king, essentially — a chief executive who has unlimited power.

He also does have a really weird sense of mortality, in a way. He wants to be legendary. Again, go back to video games. I think he wants the glory of it. He has those images in his head. And that’s not by way of excuse. It’s by way of explanation — that this is how he looks at himself, as on a grand journey of the hero.

He’s not a hero, by the way — let me be clear.

I agree that he wants power for his ideas, but it has always been a little bit mysterious to me what led to this striking radicalization in him. Because the ideas that Musk seems committed to have changed.

Peter Thiel, who cofounded PayPal with him, has always been pretty far right. You can go back to things he was writing at Stanford.

But Musk was a kind of standard Obama-era liberal. He has a series of companies that are solving problems that are important to Obama-era liberals. Those companies survive off Obama-era policies — from government contracts to electric vehicle subsidies, loan guarantees.

Tesla was saved by an Obama loan guarantee. And even in 2017, Musk joins an advisory board with Trump and then he gets back off it when Trump pulls out of the Paris climate accords.

So you have someone who is running public-private partnerships, working endlessly with the government, working on things like climate change. And within a compressed matter of years, he moves very far to the right.

You’re right. During the Obama years, he was supportive. When he joined that Trump thing — we texted a lot during that period, and he was like: They’re trying to do an anti-gay thing. I’m going to get in there and stop them. He was very much like: I need to be here to change Trump’s mind. Only I can change it.

He wasn’t anti-Trump, but he certainly wasn’t pro-Trump, I can tell you that. He was very much in the con-man school of thought with Trump.

Around Covid, I saw a lot of changes. I talked to him quite a lot, and people give me a hard time for having done that. I get it. But he wasn’t that off-the-beaten track before. I mean, he was megalomaniacal. He was typical of a tech person but doing more interesting things. There was a real shift during Covid. I noticed it. He got overly upset and overly dramatic.

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Look, I mean, if you think your company is critical for the future of the human race and then California closes it down because of Covid, you get in that mode. He got very unreasonable. And in one interview I did with him, he started saying only a few thousand people — or whatever, I don’t remember precisely — were going to die from Covid, and he had read all the studies, and he knew, and I didn’t.

He’s never liked unions or the government or regulation. That goes way back for all these people. And so it became more profound during Covid, this idea.

I think the issues around his trans daughter seemed to have affected him quite profoundly. I’ve noticed that in a number of tech people who have trans children. They suddenly become — like, losing their mind, essentially.

The second thing I think The Wall Street Journal has correctly reported on is his use of ketamine and other drugs. So I think that was another thing that seemed to have changed him. Although they all use drugs —

I know a lot of people who use ketamine. They don’t tend to turn that far politically right.

It was also staying up late at night. He has this weird proclivity to be up at 3:00 in the morning. He’s got an obsessive personality. We all have that element to us, but he’s got it in spades.

I keep saying this to people — and I said it at the time when Biden did not invite him to that E.V. summit and invited Mary Barra instead and treated him shabbily. He was very upset. Like, very.

I talked to him a lot about it — or he texted me. And other people noticed it, too. This was a summit that Biden had, and he couldn’t invite him because of the union issues. Musk was very virulently anti-union, so they didn’t invite him. And he was very upset — personally upset. Wounded, almost.

I even went as far as to call Steve Ricchetti, who worked for Biden. And I said: Boy, have you made a mistake. You should bear-hug this guy. He’s really mad.

And Steve Ricchetti was like: Oh, you know, it’s the unions. He should understand. He’s a big boy.

And I was like: No, he’s not a big boy.

The Biden people are all very relational. For them to have missed what a relational snub like this could do to somebody with his ego — it’s a mistake at the kind of politics they were supposed to be so good at.

Steve is a lovely guy. I actually ran into him at a movie premiere for “Wicked,” and he goes: Guess you were right. And I’m like: Guess so.

The way Musk takes slights is really strange. I had seen it in action — sort of petty anger and slight slights. And that one really stuck hard. And the Biden people kept tweaking him.

You could be like: So what? But I’m like: Why would you do that? He actually does deserve the accolades around Tesla. So why not just give him that? And I never understood why they wouldn’t, despite the union stuff.

There’s a factor you haven’t mentioned here, which is Twitter. The Wall Street Journal has a piece from years ago where it’s tracking his number of tweets, year by year. From 2012 to 2014, you begin to see it really explode. And by 2018, he’s really off to the races.

There’s a lot going on in his use of Twitter. And obviously, he eventually buys Twitter. But he clearly becomes very influenced by some quite radically right subcultures on Twitter.

I don’t know what the chicken and the egg is here, but he doesn’t become a normal Republican. He doesn’t even become, in some ways, a normal MAGA Republican. He’s not like Steve Bannon or something. He falls into a world of Twitter anons and —

Well, let’s start off with joking stuff. He loves dank memes.

You know him so much better than I do. But the couple of times I have been around him — and this was years ago, before he was who he is now — I would tell people: He was the smartest 15-year-old boy in the world.

That’s a very good way to put it. Yes.

So he got really into the memes. And this was always a real door into a dark right wing on that particular platform.

It always is. I have experiences with my own son. He loves dank memes. He always sends me dank memes or whatever. And you can fall down it very quickly.

And I think that’s what attracted him to Twitter, for sure. And then it took off into a much darker place. He’s an addictive personality, clearly. Whether it’s to work or — “hard-core” is one of his favorite words, which I find to be hustle porn.

He’s attracted to addiction. So his Twitter use is — you can see it. It’s manic. And he’s a manic person. Again, not an excuse, but an explanation. He has a manic personality — and violative.

But all the time he would send dank memes. He retweeted them. He loved that world. And he really was affected when the Babylon Bee people — this was a right-leaning Christian humor site, and they were shut down by Twitter over a trans thing. They gave one of the Biden officials who was trans a man-of-the-year award. It really got him upset.

And it was stupid and rude — but why take it down? I agreed with him. Why take the stupid thing down? But they did. And that really got him going, for sure.

There’s also a reality that, in a way that is unusual among people of his class, he’s really good at social media. In the way young people are — not in the way Barack Obama is.

I don’t think he’s good. My kids are always like: Cringe.

Fair enough. But there is an official voice of social media — the voice Mark Zuckerberg used to have before he became an Elon Musk imitator online. Or the voice that you would get from Obama or Bill Gates.

And Musk isn’t in that voice. He’s constantly responding to small follower accounts. And he really does build up an attentional power that he didn’t have before. He loves attention. But he also uses it to drive meme coins higher. I think he begins to understand what you can turn attention into — in a way other people don’t, because he’s experimenting with it.

What set him apart from the other people who superficially looked like him that made him temperamentally suited to doing that?

His manic nature, right? It’s got a manic-addictive quality to it. And he does have a sense of humor. It’s not my sense of humor, and people will hate me for saying this, but it can be rather charming. When he was on “Saturday Night Live” —

Archived clip of Elon Musk: Look, I know I sometimes say or post strange things, but that’s just how my brain works. To anyone I’ve offended, I just want to say I reinvented electric cars, and I’m sending people to Mars in a rocket ship. Did you think I was also going to be a chill, normal dude?

He was so awkward that it was charming. And other people are going to say: Kara loves him. Well, I don’t care. Go watch it —

Do you really have all these people in your life who are surprised when, as a reporter in tech —

Oh, yes: You made him.

Oh, my God — they’re so exhausting. I have to tell you, sometimes the left is so ridiculously censorious. I don’t want to use “censorious.” They’re just scoldish. They’re not censoring in any way. They can say whatever they want.

But yes, I get a lot of like: You made him — like you didn’t know it —

Well, I didn’t know how he was treating his kid. I’m sorry — I didn’t know that. And had I known I would have —

You also didn’t make him. The car company was successful because the cars were good.

I was covering him as a car manufacturer.

tLook, I’m not going to make an excuse. Silicon Valley has a million people like him. He was very typical — except he was doing more interesting things than other people.

So getting back to how he’s good at it: I once wrote a column in The Times — when I was writing for The Times — about the two people I thought were very good — which were Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez and Trump. Kim Kardashian is another person who’s like this. You don’t have to like any of these people, but boy, are they good at channeling themselves as an image online. And it feels genuine. It feels like them doing it, and it is them doing it. It feels like it’s their voice.

People love when someone that famous reacts to them and then it creates a sensation around them. So then you get a lot of acolytes: Oh, my god, Elon Musk responded to me.

And he feeds off that, too. And again, he initially combined humor with that or insights to interesting things. And then it has very quickly twisted into stuff he doesn’t know anything about. He just pontificates, and that’s his favorite thing — to say all manner of nonsense and inaccuracies about things he doesn’t know what he’s talking about.

I remember being at Code years ago, and you all had Musk onstage. You talked through how he believed in the simulation hypothesis, which is a hypothesis that you should expect that any sufficiently advanced civilization will begin running simulations of the world.

There will be more simulations than there will be base realities. So by a simple matter of arithmetic, we are more likely to be living in a simulated world than in the real world. And Musk said he bought this and thought there was a pretty low chance we were in base reality.

He said there’s a non-zero chance. And it fascinated him —

Well, that’s what I was going to get at. Not the simulation hypothesis. I think people can make too much of whether or not that idea matters. But I think he has always had a mind that is attracted to unusual ideas.

The things that most people believe are probably wrong — what you can and can’t do, what is and isn’t true. And he has been proven right a number of times in very big, profound ways.

Now he’s the richest man in the world. He has the most attention in the world. That’s going to change your psychology.

One thing that then seems true, though, is that he doesn’t just get attracted to unusual ideas, but he gets more conspiratorial as I watch him on Twitter. And I’m curious how you understand that dimension of him.

Kevin Roose, The New York Times journalist, did a great thing about that. You go down this rabbit hole, and it can really be: Well, did you know this? Everybody is subject to it with the way social media works.

And that’s the mind of technology people. They’re like: This could happen. We could go to the moon. You have to have that element to you if you’re going to do very difficult things. You have to start with that personality. And therefore every single thing is open to question: Why do we do it this way?

It’s a personality trait I like. But what happens is, when they start to get to Ukraine or vaccines or whatever, they have to question everything and posit themselves.

I always joke about it with my wife: Oh, yet another bold truth teller. I’m so tired of them. I’m here to boldly tell you the truth without any actual information or reporting.

So he’s attracted to ideas like the simulation. Like: Why can’t we live on Mars?

Not everybody does that. And I think it starts off from a good place. But often, in the social media world — as Kevin correctly put out in that podcast he did — it goes down into the conspiracy theory avenue really quickly.

But it’s a very specific kind of conspiracy theory he gets into. He responds to someone who tweets that Jews “have been pushing the exact kind of dialectical hatred against whites that they claim to want people to stop using against them.” And Musk replies: “You have said the actual truth.”

And in July 2024, just before he came out in support of Trump, he accused Democrats of trying to “import as many illegal voters as possible.”

And in this way, I think what is going on with him is a little bit distinct from a lot of the people who superficially have similar politics. Because I think he’s really bought into a lot of great replacement theory.

Yes. So have a lot of people in Silicon Valley. Let me say: He’s not alone. This Curtis Yarvin stuff. They’ve all sort of been taken by these — it’s almost religious, if you think about it.

One of the things that I think it goes back to — and I hate to say this — is: sad little boy who wasn’t loved enough as a child is searching for meaning, is searching for love. And again, not an excuse, because I think he’s become a terrible person, and he should get therapy.

But when there are easy answers like that — Oh, this is why you’re so unhappy. Oh, this is why the world is the way it is — these right-wing conspiracies do scratch an itch for these people.

It’s a religion. It’s their answer to the world.

It’s also a politics. Musk is South African. Peter Thiel spent much of his childhood in South Africa. David Sacks is South African.

I’ve never quite known how much weight to put on this interpretation, but it seems relevant and interesting that Thiel, Musk and Sacks, who are three of the most significant figures in Silicon Valley’s embrace of Trump, have this very distinctive political experience of watching South Africa’s white minority move from being in control of the country to a frightened minority in the country.

There is that element to a lot of these people. And the same thing with Silicon Valley people.

Again, when you merge that with the ideas around Silicon Valley — which is highly male, highly we have all the answers — it’s like: Why are these silly people in our way?

And with the South African thing — I don’t know. I don’t know what happened there that created this group of people. But you could say that about people who come from Russia or China. Or there’s an element of a whole bunch of people who immigrated from India. They bring with them whatever culture happened there.

And it’s South Africa. You can go one of two ways: The Athol Fugard way or this way of longing for pastimes in some fashion.

Musk eventually buys Twitter. It’s a sort of unusual acquisition, and he tries to get out of it while it’s happening. But he does buy it. And he comes in and immediately slashes right through it. People talk about this as head-count reduction. They talk about it as cutting waste or cutting bone.

But when you look back on it now, what it was — both in reality and culturally in Silicon Valley — was a C.E.O.’s reassertion of control over an overly empowered liberal employee base. Talk a little bit about the cultural effect of what he did on his cohort.

I think what was really interesting is a lot of these guys — can I use this in The New York Times? — have tiny-dick energy. I don’t know what else to say.

They want to be big swinging dicks, and they won’t do it. They won’t go there, because they’re worried about what people will say. Everyone is sort of watching each other. And this guy goes in and just does it.

In Silicon Valley, the employees run the show. They really do. They like to get their lunches. They like to get their cars or dry cleaning. They like to speak up. And by the way, they started it. Google started it, with having the employees talk back every Friday. What do you think was going to happen? Right?

Facebook having a Friday meeting where Mark Zuckerberg answers employee questions. And they all create internal chat software, like Slack and Teams, that allow employees to be speaking in a way that they can organize that speech, even without unions.

They gave power to their employees. I had a discussion — I don’t think it was Mark — where it was like: Now they’re talking back. I’m like: What did you think they were going to do?

You indulge children for long enough and give them sugar all day long — they’re going to become terrible people. You know what I mean? The fact that they were surprised that this is what happened when they created these cultures, I’m always surprised by.

So they have all these employees that annoy them. They let them say whatever they wanted. And then they said whatever they wanted. And then they were annoyed by their saying whatever they wanted.

And they found it very hard to push back, because talent is at a premium in Silicon Valley. So you have to let everybody be themselves. And it got annoying for a lot of these C.E.O.s.

But with Musk, when he did it, you could see everybody in Silicon, they already had this: Oh, he gets to do that. I don’t get to do that. I have to listen to my diversity, equity, inclusion people. Like: Oh, I hate those people. But he doesn’t have to. He can do whatever he wants.

And when Musk did that and cut people, they wanted to do that, too.

This feels to me like part of the Covid-era radicalization that happened to the Silicon Valley C.E.O. class between 2020 and 2024. Something happening during Covid, during the rise of various reckonings — #MeToo and Black Lives Matter.

And I really think it has a lot to do with the rise of Slack and Teams and things like that. I think it’s a very underrated dimension of what changed the relationship between bosses and their employees.

You really see this in Mark Zuckerberg’s personal transformation. And Musk becomes the avatar of what to do about it in the end. It feels to me like a lot of the C.E.O.s just hated their employees. And what radicalized them was that they had lost control of their companies, and they wanted that control back.

And that, as much as anything, feels to me like the theory Musk is importing now to the government. He’s talked about cutting spending, cutting waste. But what he’s trying to get for Trump, or for himself, is control.

Right. It’s sort of the rid me of this annoying priest kind of thing. Rid me of these people.

Again, it’s a king thing. The way they set up their companies is a kingship. Mark Zuckerberg has complete control. He can’t be fired. He’s there for life.

So they like that. But in practice, it doesn’t work that way. Because he’s got reporters annoying him. He’s got his staff. He’s got to at least give a nod to diversity or else he gets shamed. He doesn’t have the fortitude that Musk has in that regard.

So they are trying to assert themselves in what they consider a man. This is the definition of what a man is. A lot of them were not considered manly when they were in high school. Revenge of the nerds.

With Mark, it’s the stupid chain and the T-shirt, which — good luck. It’s fine. I think it looks ridiculous, but fine. He likes it. Or the mixed martial arts. Or I’m going to hydrofoil. Or I’m going to work out. I’m going to show off my muscles there. That’s what Jeff Bezos is doing. Like: Here’s my muscles. Here’s my pretty fiancée. They’re trying to cosplay a version of a man.

It seems pathetic to me. But I think it gives them great comfort.

One of the Rosetta stones, to me, of the intellectual shift happening among this class was when Musk and Zuckerberg were talking about having a fight in a cage.

This has its own funny subthemes, where Zuckerberg is taking it all incredibly earnestly, and Musk is clearly mocking him the whole time. So there’s a whole dynamic where they don’t have the cage match — which Zuckerberg would win, but Musk wins because what he was doing was making fun of Mark Zuckerberg.

They didn’t like each other. Just to be clear: They didn’t like each other.

And then there’s an Allen & Company conference, one of these big C.E.O. tech conferences. Marc Andreessen is asked about this exchange. And he ends up sending out his answer on his Substack. And he basically says: I think it’s great if they fight. Because we’ve lost all the masculine virtues of the Greeks. And if it was good enough for the Greeks, it’s good enough for us.

And one of the things happening in the right-wing intellectual subculture that these guys are increasingly part of is a sense that the world has feminized and that the masculine virtues — of aggression, of combat, of conflict, of daring, of risk, of just making decisions and to hell with it — have been diminished.

And what’s needed is some kind of correction. Modernity is going off the rails because we’re becoming womanly and soft. And I guess this class of venture capitalists and tech founders is going to show us our way back to it.

Well, they don’t like women to start with. Come on. So this shouldn’t be a surprise they don’t like the ladies.

Well, the intellectualization of it is what becomes interesting.

It’s absolutely true — they don’t have women in their midst. I wrote a piece once called “The Men and (No) Women Facebook of Facebook Management,” and Mark got hurt by it. And I was like: What? I’m just putting up pictures of your management. I don’t know what to tell you. You hired them.

They’re very fixated on what a man is, and how to behave.

And what’s really interesting — especially Marc Andreessen: If he could jog 10 feet, I’d be surprised. Talking about the manly virtues — give me a break.

When Zuckerberg said that, I was like: I could beat him up in five seconds. I don’t even understand where this comes from. Now he’s going to try to challenge me to a fight. Whatever.

It’s a concept of what a man is that is not what a man is, but they’ve decided it is.

Of all these people, Elon didn’t cosplay a lot like that. Except now he’s starting to wear cowboy hats and that whole nonsense that he’s doing. But he actually didn’t as much as they did. And now they take all their cues from his aggression, which is interesting.

When I think back on that fight they were going to have, Zuckerberg for a minute seemed to be positing himself as the Elon foil. He challenged him to a fight. He had Threads, and Elon had X. And now you see Zuckerberg copying him. The way he engages on Threads is the way Elon engages on Twitter.

Yeah, Zuckerberg is such a beta. [Laughs.] He’s such a beta. I love saying that.

There is this deep way in which Musk seems to have reset the culture, or at least been the signal that allowed a lot of the people who weren’t quite ready to come out and say how they’ve been feeling themselves to move. He led a lot of the flood toward Trump of tech leaders and now is showing how you can actually turn this into political power.

Peter Thiel, for better or worse, supported Trump early. But he didn’t try to wield the power himself. Thiel makes bets and watches them pay off or not. But Musk is going in and showing: Oh, it could just be you. You could not only have all this power as a technology C.E.O., but you could be one of the most important celebrities in the world — and you could be functionally shadow president.

Yes, Zuckerberg hid from the attention. Zuckerberg liked the acclaim, but he never liked the shit that went with it. That’s why he didn’t push all the way through. And that was interesting.

And Musk does have the guts to do that. Like: I’m going to do it no matter what. I eat my attackers for breakfast. Come and get me.

This is Trump’s personality, too. They seem to be temperamentally similar. It takes a very unusual personality to be shameless at that level.

If you want to really wield power, you have to be willing to be hated. And one of the things most of us are not willing to do is to be truly hated. And most C.E.O.s are not willing to be truly hated. There’s a decision they both made. And that disinhibition is, to me, central to their alliance.

Well, they do care, though, underneath. Trump wants nothing more than have The New York Times love him. You can feel it — the sense of victimhood —

I don’t buy it anymore. Maybe he did once. But I don’t buy it anymore.

I do. I think they both care quite a bit of what people think. I think they care almost too much what people think. And it fuels their rage in a lot of ways.

There is a little piece of them that is never not going to care about what people think of them, and they become more and more emboldened by that. It’s the center of their rocket fuel.

It may be true that it’s rocket fuel for them. But I just think that at a certain point, you lose the belief that these people are even friends you still want to have. And that’s what real radicalization is. Radicalization often takes the normal pluralistic, we’re-all-in-this-together give-and-take off the table. It becomes an all-out war.

And I do think Trump and — in a different, more intellectualized way — Musk now sees this as an all-out war where you have to gain control. He was on Rogan’s show saying that there would be no more elections if Trump didn’t win this time.

Musk has really gotten into the civilizational battle. He clearly believes in some level of great replacement theory. He’s now trying to get the far-right Alternative for Germany party elected in Germany. He’s trying to get the Labour Party out of power in the United Kingdom.

For a very long time, the line of Musk was that everything is backward from his belief that eventually humanity needs to be an interplanetary species.

Well, look at all his children. He manifests himself by having so many children and seemingly not spending time with them, except for one. He wants to have children but not necessarily be a parent, which I think is an interesting thing to plumb at some point.

So what is the goal that now motivates him? Do you really believe it’s still the interplanetary thing? Or is it a view that these countries are losing their cultures, and if you lose those cultures, everything is lost?

I do think it does manifest from the need to get off this planet. That is the one consistent thing since I’ve met him — this idea that civilization is doomed, and therefore we need to get off this planet.

I think at their heart, they do believe the version of themselves is the greatest version of man. Which would be a white-guy, supreme kind of thing. I think they actually believe that at their heart.

So you’re going to see that manifested in these statements that he makes all the time. I forget what he said, but essentially: We need more South Africans here in this country — or something like that. And he’s always sort of pulling in that direction.

I have never heard him express any kind of what I would consider — I’ve heard different C.E.O.s express racism. His is a different kind. It’s more around social engineering and the idea that the best people are being replaced. I think that’s really where he lives. Which is also racist, of course.

So to you, the synthesis of these positions is that Musk is still motivated by the desire to become interplanetary. But he just believes that we are corroding the civilizational virtues and genius that you would need to do that with diversity, equity and inclusion and the woke-mind virus and —

Everything is in the way of our getting somewhere else because the lesser people are in charge. He does talk about this a lot.

At one point he was tweeting about cesarean sections, where he said something like: If you have a cesarean, you have a better brain because your brain comes out bigger. Because you’re not going through the vaginal canal.

And I’ve had a cesarean, so I sort of was like: Sit down, sir. You don’t know what you’re talking about.

It passed people by, but I was like: Oh, he thinks you have to preserve the birth — it’s sort of eugenics almost. You know what I mean? It was such a thing for him to go down that avenue.

But he has these theories about human brains and development. Obviously, he’s involved with Neuralink. So he has always been interested in the idea of machines and people merging together. The Neuralink stuff is certainly an area that hasn’t been plumbed enough.

To bring it back to the government — if I pull out what you’re saying here — what you have is someone who thinks that, for humanity to achieve its long-term goals, you need people like Elon Musk in control of the federal government. And you need a polity that isn’t infected by these modern progressive ideas of equity and consensus and committed to all these things that are slow, burdensome, regulatory and soft and don’t allow for the risk of blowing up 90 rockets.

He’s trying to functionally make the federal government something that can be effectively controlled by people like him in order to achieve these goals. Do you see it that way?

Yes, I think he thinks they’re in the way. Everyone’s like: Oh, they want to reform it. I go: No, no, no, they want to burn it down and start again.

This goes back to Peter Thiel. If you spend time reading Peter Thiel, that is what he’s saying: Democracy doesn’t work. We’re going to start with something else.

And that is sort of the ethos of “move fast and break things” — which is a software term. They don’t want to build. They want to break. And they can’t build until you break. And that’s a disruption. Think of all the words they use. It’s all about destruction. And it’s not creative destruction. It’s: Let’s wipe the slate clean, and then we will build the civilization we want. And let us show you how we can get back to glory.

It’s that theory — but they burnish it with this techno-utopianism that is really techno-authoritarianism — that they know best, and if we just listen to them, the world would be a better place for everybody.

To try to be generous to it as a theory of governmental reform, which —

I know you like to do that.

I try —

I think democracies work pretty [expletive] well, but go ahead.

Musk has said regulations basically should be default gone. Not default there — default gone. And if it turns out that we missed the mark on a regulation, we can always add it back in.

So given that we have a longtime stable government with a lot of bureaucracy, the theory here — which I guess is also a theory from Twitter — is: Yes, you turn things off, you cut hugely. And if there’s a problem, you fix it later. But better to cut deeper and rebuild in a cleaner way than to cut not deep enough.

Politics, normally, does not go that far in reform. It’s very hard to reform institutions. And there are real problems from that. San Francisco works quite poorly. Much of the federal government leaves something to be desired.

So is there a case to be made here for Muskism — that he is doing what normal political reformers won’t do and taking risk in order to do it? That this is actually the only way to create a federal bureaucracy that is not quite so sclerotic?

No, I think it’s not. Not at all. I’m a reform person. Obviously, everything is not going to happen at once. There is an ease to tearing it all down, isn’t there? And there has to be a willingness to sacrifice people. They don’t care about that.

A lot of people will ask: How can they do this? How can they do this? And I’m like: They don’t care for you. They don’t think about you. You’re nothing.

Musk was the earliest person to talk to me about artificial intelligence. A.I. has been around forever, but he was really concerned about the impact of A.I. on humanity. That was another thing. He was the first person to raise those alarms, to me at least, when he started OpenAI with Sam Altman and the rest of them.

First he was like: A.I. is going to kill us. The Terminator idea, right? It’s going to become self-aware, and then it’s going to turn around and bomb us and kill us and start again. And we’ve got to stop that. That was his theory.

Next time I saw him, he came up with a much more sophisticated idea of it, which was: They’re not going to kill us. They’re going to treat us like house cats. They’re fine with us here, and they’re going to build everything around us. But we’re not in danger. As long as they like house cats, we’re fine. They don’t think of us as anything more.

Then the next time I saw him, he had evolved into this idea that A.I. was more like building highways — the way we build highways across the country. Humanity is a bunch of anthills. And we go across anthills without thinking when we’re building roads. We don’t know that the anthills are there. We just do it.

And I thought he was expressing how he operates: These things are anthills. I don’t have to think about them, because we never think about them. To me, that was a really interesting progression: The first one cares about what happens to humanity, and the last one doesn’t.

I like that progression of metaphors. What you put into the metaphor reveals what you can see and not see out of the metaphor.

I think the dominant comparison for what Musk is doing is Twitter, where he came in and used, in some ways, a very similar playbook to take control of the company. But during that period, Twitter broke down. Its advertising collapsed. It’s still a much jankier platform than it used to be. It has things it didn’t have before, like Grok. But the search doesn’t work.

And when I look at what Trump is outsourcing to Musk right now, I wonder if they have really thought about the risk they’re taking on. I’ve never seen an administration come in and so completely own everything bad that might happen that the federal government does or is supposed to regulate in the coming years.

If you imagine something like the terrible plane crash that happened just recently happening in a year when pushed retirements have come through the Federal Aviation Administration — and Musk already pushed the administrator of the F.A.A. to resign — you would get a lot more blame for that.

But bad things happen all the time. The federal government is supposed to stop financial crises and so on. They’re coming with this ax to the government — pushing indiscriminate resignations, reassigning people, pushing out very talented career staff. Anything that goes wrong they are truly going to own.

Yes, but they won’t do that. They will say: We’re cleaning up from the previous administration.

You think they care about consequences? One of the messages in my memoir was —

I think they care about power.

They don’t care about the consequences of damage. They do not care. They don’t anticipate it.

You’re right about Twitter — it’s a lesser business. The only way he’s getting advertisers is by threatening them. They’re just doing these lawsuits. And of course these advertisers are going to go back, just to acquiesce to him —

Now he has power, right? It’s a way to pay him off —

Tesla is not a better business than what it was, because they haven’t innovated the cars. That stock may be going up, but the sales are going down because the cars aren’t as good. They just aren’t.

So he doesn’t care about the actual thing. These people don’t care about the actual thing. They care about laying waste to it, and then saying they’ll build something better.

But I don’t know what they’re going to build better. If you press them, it’s never about solutions. It’s about how everything sucks and we have to get rid of it. They never tell you what their replacement is for any of it, because they don’t have a theory of building. They have a theory of destruction.

Trump with the water thing: We’ve got to get the water flow.

What a disaster that was, what he just did. In California, he’s wasting water —

Opening reservoirs for no reason to fight fires that are gone.

No reason. And then the whole group of people going: Mm-hmm, sir, well done.

I’m like — who is not standing there among the media going: Are you [expletive] kidding me with this?

That’s why they don’t let me in the White House. I’m like: Are you [expletive] kidding me? That was a disaster, what you just did. You idiot.

I think back to Twitter, on the control question. Because Musk buys Twitter. He breaks a lot of Twitter. He breaks the business of Twitter. Clearly he’s overpaying at $44 billion.

So I would have told you a year ago, 18 months ago: That didn’t work out.

But what ended up happening was that he made Twitter a channel for him personally. And he turned all of its attention and influence into something he could control.

I don’t know if the power he’s getting out of that is worth $44 billion. But I actually think it’s worth more than that. I don’t think it would be possible for Musk to play this role in both domestic and now international politics if he didn’t do that. We don’t know how to value attention enough.

Oh, it’s the best investment he made. Except for investing in Trump — that $280 million.

Let me tell you, when he bought Twitter, we were all sort of like: What in the world? Why is he paying so much? What an idiot.

Right? Everybody was saying that. That was sort of it.

Well, he was, too. He tried to get out of it on the view that it was overvalued.

He tried to get out of it. He thought he was stupid. Because he wasn’t anticipating what he could use it for. He didn’t realize he had a really big gun there. He thought it was a knife.

The only person who called me was Mark Cuban. And he said: Kara, he’s not buying it. Maybe he doesn’t know he’s doing this. When he goes into a room internationally as the head of Tesla or Starlink, I mean, he gets a meeting just like the head of General Motors or Lockheed gets. When he goes in as the owner of Twitter, he has enormous power globally, from an influence point of view.

He goes: This is not a U.S. play. This is a global play.

I think Mark was 100 percent right. Musk bought it, and he’s the Twitter guy. And also Tesla. No one else has that. Maybe, back in the day, Rupert Murdoch. And that’s what he’s done. But bigger, better, stronger, more influential. Rupert Murdoch would never think of sitting with Trump cutting this stuff.

Murdoch didn’t want to be the main character of his own platform.

But he is kind of Rupert Murdoch now. Except a Rupert Murdoch who likes to do [expletive].

I’ve said the same thing. I think that’s the absolutely correct comparison.

But that brings us to the government. He may not know what he wants to build after, but what the Twitter experience probably taught him is: If you break it, you can control it. You can make it a vehicle for you.

I don’t know if even he knows what he wants to do with the government, but he wants everybody to see that it is him doing it. I thought it was so telling that in the email they sent out to federal employees persuading them to resign, he gave it the same subject line as the email he sent out to Twitter employees during that buyout.

He wanted everybody to know it was him. He wants to be the main character of the whole thing — as you said at the beginning.

Thank god, you said that because all the media was like: Look at this interesting thing.

And I’m like: He wants you to know.

It’s a signature.

He totally wanted people to know. Everything he does, he wants you to know. Because again, he is a desperate attention sponge. Why would you stay up at night talking to people named Catturd? Why?

Because you have a desperately empty hole in the center of your life that you can never fill. It’s a bottomless well. And I hate to break it down like that because I’m not a psychologist, but boy, does he have a big old hole right in the center of himself.

So what I think is very telling about both of these people is they do not have solutions.

They only tell us what the problem is, and they don’t have a vision. Even Ronald Reagan had a vision.

What is your vision except get out of my way and let me do what I want to do?

That’s really the vision that I can tell. I haven’t heard what they want to make at all.

There’s this idea of the sin eater in fantasy novels. I forget exactly where it comes from, but it’s the character that consumes sin and then can be purged. It’s a sort of sacrificial character.

It’s Jesus, I think.

In a way. Musk — I wonder a bit about that in terms of the pain of the administrative war that Trump and the people around him wanted to do.

When I think about when this starts to go bad, assuming this starts to go bad, Musk taking so much credit for it all makes him so usefully sacrificial. When the people around Musk who are more careful and quiet — the Susie Wileses, the Russ Voughts, the rest of them who are not against this agenda —

Have you noticed they’re all leaking: We don’t have control of him.

Yes, there’s a lot of leaking already that we can’t control Musk.

So at the moment he becomes more liability than asset, you can get rid of him. Trump can be like: Elon Musk got out of control. That wasn’t us.

I don’t know that it happens. And he has leverage he can bring to a fight like that. But it doesn’t seem impossible that it happens. And you can see people setting up that escape route as we speak.

Utterly. Trump’s life is full of those people. And now he’s got the greatest one ever. Michael Cohen was that. There’s always a fixer in Trump’s life who’s willing to go to the mat for the boss — which he likes to be called, apparently.

So Musk is that writ large. He’s much more protected because he’s so wealthy.

How real do you think the affection between the two of them is?

Donald Trump has three emotions: A, B, C. I don’t think he’s very complex in that regard.

I did think they were going to fight, and I know he’s irritating to Trump. You hear that from a lot of people. And I think it’s absolutely true — Musk probably is irritating. At the same time, Trump loves money. That’s at the heart of him.

I think Donald Trump finds him useful, and he is useful to Donald Trump. He’s a useful junkyard dog. And he has a lot of money. So if Trump has a cudgel against these senators, Musk is going to give him money to take them out. He’s got a bank that never ends, essentially.

He also knows he needs him to hold on to power. Because what does it look like when they fight? You don’t want Elon Musk outside the tent. That’s a really bad place for Elon Musk to be. And angry — because he’s shown he has an ability to fight back.

So ultimately it could go on for a while. And he could do more and more outlandish things and behave in more and more outlandish ways. Trump has an endless capacity for: Oh, did he say a racist thing? I don’t care.

So I think it could go on for a very long time.

I’ve been struck to see Trump already trying to make clear that Elon is under his control. He said: “Elon can’t do and won’t do anything without our approval. And we’ll give him the approval where appropriate, where not appropriate, we won’t.”

And then there’s this endless leaking from inside the administration that nobody is actually in control of him. Trump is not paying attention to what he’s doing.

And I sort of think both things are actually true — that Trump could say no to him, but actually Trump doesn’t care. So the danger for both of them, in a strange way, is that Musk, who is hyper-empowered and has an almost endless appetite for risk, takes a risk that blows up for all of them.

What could that be? Like, detonate a nuclear bomb?

You break the government. And things are going to break.

You have to have a very dim view of government to believe that if you get rid of this many talented people in it that when bad things begin to happen in the world — and they happen constantly — I mean, there was a pandemic in Trump’s first term.

But Trump in his first term had this real interesting capacity to always seem like he was outside of the state that he, in theory, ran. And that always gave him this strange ability to separate himself from how a government that he didn’t like worked. That was the whole political utility of the deep state.

But they’ve torched that. I know they might still try to claim it. But when you do this bulldozer tactic, and it’s this public, and you are absorbing all this risk and pushing these people out, then when things break and people go back and they look and say: Well, a bunch of the people here, they actually took the buyout, they took your fork in the road, Elon.

I could be wrong. It could all work out great for them. But they are taking a lot of risk.

You’re operating on the idea that they care about the pain. They don’t care. They won’t take responsibility for it. Have you heard Mark Zuckerberg take responsibility for any of the problems?

I think Trump cares about pain, though. Look at how quickly he backed off on his tariffs on Canada and Mexico when the markets began to move. You can lose midterm elections really badly. And then all of a sudden the investigations are coming for you.

Right. Which is probably what will happen.

One of the things that he’s got to keep Musk around for is the money — to manipulate things, to really flood the zone with all kinds of money and efforts to win the midterms.

But again: They don’t care. He has done the damage. My guess is that Musk thinks this is the only way to do it — to get rid of everything. They’re hoping you focus so much on the destruction that you’re not going to notice you’re living in a destroyed place.

And I know you think there are bigger implications, but they’ll be so all over the place, it will be hard to figure out what actually has been destroyed. Or to feel a sense of anger. What’s going to happen is people are going to feel a sense of nihilism.

I do think that’s often the emotion that they are attempting to provoke.

I want to ask you a question about the broader Silicon Valley tech culture here. You’ve had this big, almost herdlike, movement toward what you called techno-authoritarianism.

It’s been so fast and so intense among the sort of cultural leaders of Silicon Valley — the people with the biggest social media accounts. And they’re all at the Trump inauguration.

When you think of the cultural currents there, do you see a counterforce? Is it all just moving in this direction? Are the employees moving in this direction?

What is the contrarian bet in terms of this intellectual culture? Which was very different 10 years ago, when everybody was pro-Obama.

They weren’t pro-Biden. I can tell you that.

They were not pro-Biden. But they hated Donald Trump in 2016 — with the exception of Thiel.

So it moves very fast. And it makes me wonder where it’s going to be in four years. I’m curious if you have a sense of who you’re watching as signals of that change.

There are a few people. Reid Hoffman was just on the podcast this week. I sense fear in him. He funded the E. Jean Carroll lawsuit. He’s a very lovely person, and he’s very evenhanded all the time — almost to a fault. I don’t think he’s going to be as aggressive — and he certainly was. But he’s got to be thinking: What do I do? I’m very exposed.

You have Mark Cuban, who I think presents a different alternative. He claims to me he doesn’t want to run for president. I think he has a real opening of like: Oh, come on, this is not the way we are.

I don’t think everyone has moved there. There are these loudmouths, like Musk and David Sacks and that gang. And even Peter is not that loudmouthed these days, which I find interesting.

But I don’t think everyone is on this ticket. You didn’t see Tim Cook in the front row. Somehow he didn’t have to be in that picture.

I have never thought Silicon Valley was liberal. I thought they were utilitarian, I guess. I thought they were tolerant socially but didn’t really care, didn’t think about it much. I think these people just want to do their business.

And I don’t think they support Trump. Whether you’re Bob Iger — or whether you’re anybody — you’ve got to pay the vig. You don’t have a choice right now.

I don’t think there’s a deep well of support for Trump. I think there’s a bunch of loudmouths, and everyone else just shakes their head.

So when that’s the case, there tends to be a countervailing force. These guys are shakedown artists, right? As you say, disaster will come, and this will be a big [expletive] mess.

They will line up in that direction because it’s good for them and for their shareholders. So whatever it takes for shareholders to do better — if Trump tanks the stock market — they’ll be on the opposite side instantly.

Because they have no real values. They just don’t. Elon has more values than most of them, in a weird way, even though they’re warped and twisted. So I think they’ll just go whatever way the financial markets go. That’s my feeling.

I think that’s a good place to end. Always our final question: What are three books you’d recommend to the audience?

There’s a memoir coming out from a very well-known media person that, once it publishes, you should read. I’m reading it right now. And I can’t say who it is because he gave it to me on the sly. But I think it’s wonderful.

I love the book “North Woods” by Daniel Mason, which came out last year. It’s the history of a house and the people who lived in it. And it’s haunting me. I think it’s the most beautiful book, and I love Daniel Mason. I’m reading “The Piano Tuner” right now. I’m reading all his stuff.

But “North Woods” is one of the things that comforts me in this very difficult time. I have four kids. I’m a gay person. It’s nerve-racking right now. I thought this was all over, and here we are again. But it gives me comfort that we’ll all be dead someday. [Laughs.] I know it sounds crazy. But life goes on. So I really like that book.

And then I recently interviewed him, and I think he’s terrific: Timothy Snyder, “On Tyranny.” I think he’s a really important person talking about where tyranny goes.

And I’m going to give one more: Geraldine Brooks, who is a wonderful writer. She won the Pulitzer. She wrote “Memorial Days,” an incredible book about the death of her husband, Tony Horwitz, who was a friend of mine. He wrote “Confederates in the Attic.” Geraldine is a friend of mine, and it’s a beautiful rumination on mortality and history. Just a wonderful book.

Kara Swisher, thank you very much.

You can listen to this conversation by following “The Ezra Klein Show” on NYT Audio AppAppleSpotifyAmazon MusicYouTubeiHeartRadio or wherever you get your podcasts. View a list of book recommendations from our guests here.

Jeff Bezos, the multibillionaire owner of The Washington Post, has driven away great reporters and many readers because of his groveling before the Great Trumputin, but the Post still has Glenn Kessler, perhaps the best fact-checker in the business. It was Kessler who counted the public lies of Trumputin in his first term. He had the exact number but I recall only the round number of 30,000. Loyalist KellyAnne Conway called them “alternative facts.” Yes, indeed, Trump’s outright lies were “facts” in an alternative universe, not this one.

Glenn Kessler wrote recently about Trumputin’s latest attack on facts and truth:

The Trump administration is sweeping through the U.S. government, terminating dozens of programs, laying off tens of thousands of workers, even dismantling entire agencies. At the same time, the White House has adopted a unique lexicon to describe its agenda — in some cases, using words that in ordinary contexts mean the opposite.

Here’s a guide to the verbiage, drawn from remarks made by President Donald Trump and White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt.
‘Transparency’

Traditionally, transparency in the federal government has meant access to data, federal contracts and government reports, even if they shed light on problems.

But Trump has fired nearly a score of inspectors general, who root out fraud and malfeasance in federal agencies. (Eight have filed suit, saying they were fired illegally.) One IG, for the U.S. Agency for International Development, was booted as soon as he issued a critical report on the aid stoppage ordered by the president. When reports emerged that a State Department website revealed that Tesla, a company owned by billionaire Elon Musk, Trump’s biggest financial backer, received a $400 million contract, the contract document was scrubbed to remove any reference to Tesla. Moreover, websites across the government were deleted — including every page for USAID.

Meanwhile, the Musk-led U.S. DOGE Service — which is targeting agencies for contract terminations and personnel cuts — operates in secret and the people on his team have not been revealed, though reporters have figured out the identity of some key players.

But the White House says the administration is transparent because Trump often answers questions from reporters. (His predecessor, Joe Biden, rarely did so and usually in controlled settings.)

“President Trump has led by example on this front as the leader of the free world, the president of the United States, with his show of access and transparency on a daily basis,” Leavitt told reporters. “The president takes questions from all of you almost every single day and really reveals what he’s thinking and feeling.”

Unfortunately, as we’ve documented, much of what Trump says is inaccurate or misleading. So he’s not an especially accurate source, compared to rigorously vetted reports and databases.


‘Free speech’

The First Amendment enshrines a right to “free speech” — the right to articulate opinions and ideas without interference, retaliation or punishment from the government. There’s always been some tension in this notion — does this give someone the right to yell “fire” in a crowded theater when there is no fire?

Conservatives objected to social media platforms such as Twitter (before Musk bought it and turned it into X) and Facebook downgrading or removing posts that contained inaccurate or false information, especially during the covid pandemic. Trump himself was removed from many platforms after he instigated a riot at the U.S. Capitol to prevent the certification of Biden’s victory in 2020. But he’s been reinstated and many social media companies have scaled back efforts to police false information circulating on their platforms.

“I stopped government censorship once and for all and we brought back free speech to America,” Trump told House GOP members after taking office.

But the White House in recent days has barred Associated Press reporters from news events because the agency still refers to the Gulf of Mexico, the internationally recognized name for the body of water that has been in use since the mid-17th century. In an executive order, Trump directed federal agencies to change the name to “Gulf of America.” The AP is an international news organization, and the rest of the world does not recognize Trump’s name change. Taylor Budowich, White House deputy chief of staff, said in a statement that the AP’s stance “is not just divisive, but it also exposes the Associated Press’ commitment to misinformation.” He said that as a result of “irresponsible and dishonest reporting” — citing the name used by the rest of the world — the AP could not expect the “privilege of unfettered access to limited spaces, like the Oval Office and Air Force One.”

Similarly, Leavitt told reporters: “I was very up front in my briefing on Day 1, that if we feel that there are lies being pushed by outlets in this room, we are going to hold those lies accountable. And it is a fact that the body of water off the coast of Louisiana is called the Gulf of America, and I’m not sure why news outlets don’t want to call it that, but that is what it is.”

‘Fraud and abuse’

Fraud generally means deception, often criminal, in pursuit of financial and personal gain. But the Trump administration has upended that definition — broadening it to include programs and policies it disagrees with — while at the same time making it harder to detect fraud.

“We’re finding tremendous fraud and tremendous abuse,” Trump said as Musk stood by his side in Oval Office. But a Fact Checker accounting of the announcements from DOGE, or Department of Government Efficiency, of terminated programs found that most concern diversity, transgender and climate change programs. Musk has also led an assault on USAID, the agency that long had bipartisan support to distribute billions of dollars in development aid around the world.

“It’s a scam,” Trump said of USAID. “It’s a fraud. A lot of it, most of it, but it’s a fraud.” Asked for evidence, the White House provided a list that was often wrong or misleading — and in any case amounted only to a pittance of the agency’s $25 billion budget.

In addition to firing IGs, Trump fired top ethics officers and neutered offices that protect workers from retribution. He also suspended enforcement of a nearly half-century-old law that investigates corporate corruption in foreign countries, while his Justice Department ordered the dismissal of bribery charges against New York Mayor Eric Adams (D) for political reasons (Adams supports Trump’s immigration policies).

A Feb. 13 White House news release berated states and localities pushing back against Trump’s executives orders on diversity and immigration. “President Donald J. Trump and his administration have a simple message: follow the law,” the news release was titled.


Deficit

In Washington, the deficit usually means the federal budget deficit. But for Trump, the deficit that matters is the trade deficit. He imposed 25 percent tariffs on steel and aluminum, threatened tariffs against Canada and Mexico and proposed to upend the current trading system by imposing reciprocal tariffs.

“We have a tremendous deficit with Mexico,” Trump said last week. “We have a tremendous deficit with Canada. We have a tremendous deficit with Europe, the E.U., with China, I don’t even want to tell you what Biden is allowed to happen with China.”

(Actually, under Biden, the trade deficit with China fell to its lowest level in 10 years, according to the Census Bureau.)

In an interview with Bret Baier of Fox News, Trump said: “Why are we paying $200 billion a year essentially in subsidy to Canada? Now, if they’re our 51st state, I don’t mind doing it.”

According to the website of the U.S. Trade Representative, the goods deficit with Canada was $63 billion in 2024. The United States has a services surplus of about $30 billion with Canada, which brings down the overall deficit even more. But since Trump took office, the website does not display trade-in-services numbers.

Unlike a budget deficit — which depends on whether the government spends more than it raises in revenue — a trade deficit is shaped by underlying factors, such as an imbalance between a country’s savings and investment rates. A bigger federal budget deficit — caused by, say, a large tax cut contemplated by Trump — can boost the trade deficit because the country saves less and borrows more from abroad. A booming economy can also be at fault — the more money people have, the more they can spend on goods from overseas. And a strong currency means those foreign goods are cheaper for a particular country and its goods are more expensive for foreign consumers.

In other words, trade deficits may be beyond Trump’s ability to control.