Summary

Elon Musk claims his Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE) is shutting down payments to federal contractors, including a Lutheran charity, asserting it is eliminating corruption.

This suggests DOGE has access to Treasury’s payment systems, though officials have not confirmed the extent.

Senator Ron Wyden warned that DOGE may interfere with Social Security, Medicare, and government contracts.

Musk also called USAID “a criminal organization” that should “die,” amid DOGE’s growing influence over federal financial operations.

    • Bakkoda
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      454 days ago

      And for people who don’t like that word:

      Regulatory capture of the entire United States government.

    • Echo Dot
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      253 days ago

      Can you guys maybe do something about this? You all have guns right, I thought that was the entire point of that part of the Constitution.

      • @[email protected]
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        3 days ago

        The point of that was to prevent the need for a standing military. The thought was a standing military would lead to tyranny

        Texas used to have gun free towns (sort of, when you entered you left your gun with the sheriff)

        Political parties were also a big nono, the runner up was supposed to be VP

      • @[email protected]
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        33 days ago

        and which side was interested in guns and militancy, and which side was against guns and militancy?

      • @[email protected]
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        13 days ago

        Unfortunately the wrong people are the ones with guns, because most of my fellow leftists in this country still believe in the myth that you don’t need a gun if you’re going to live in a country full of people with mental health issues and lack of access to affordable treatment.

        • @[email protected]
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          11 day ago

          the leftists seem to be good with guns, it’s the liberals and progressives who have trouble with them

          (to be fair, the left is dead in America)

    • @[email protected]
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      114 days ago

      Yet, no one’s doing anything about it or can do anything. These people are all powerful now. The White House, the House, the Senate, SCOTUS, Fed. Everything belongs to the Republican Party and they can do whatever, whenever. No checks and balances.

      • @[email protected]
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        4 days ago

        I reject that defeatist attitude. It’s time for tax strike and general strike and mass protests across the country as next step

        • @[email protected]
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          64 days ago

          I think we can pretty much skip the first step, wouldn’t do us much good. Protests planned at every state capital on the 5th.

        • @[email protected]
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          3 days ago

          I got laid off two weeks ago am I supposed to just not work lol, my parents live with me:\

  • @[email protected]
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    563 days ago

    If the US government stops paying their bills at a certain point the country is technically defaulting. That’s going to be fun.

        • @[email protected]
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          53 days ago

          Euro or Yuan would

          But the people in office would certainly want to replace it with crypto domestically

          • @[email protected]
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            11 day ago

            Yes, they might find a way to force crypto to be used in a case like that - but I think that would be a logistical nightmare and they would probably have to setup some kind of system to make it feasible.

            I do suspect the currency of whatever geopolitical entity demands the most economic power in the vacuum left by the U.S. collapsing will become the new global currency, but it’s also possible that this hypothetical world become more economically isolated, such that there is no single accepted global currency.

            But yeah, Euro or Yuan would be my guess as well.

        • @[email protected]
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          -33 days ago

          You know of a better alternative? Ain’t nobody going to be trading gold like an 1800’s prospector.

          • @[email protected]
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            11 day ago

            Literally any currency would be more likely and “better” than crypto. The alternative to crypto is not trading gold, but using other major currencies, like Euros. It’s unclear if the U.S. dollar collapses what currency will replace it, but I suspect that will be determined by geopolitical dominance more than anything else.

          • @[email protected]
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            63 days ago

            Better? No. But why do you think China has been pushing all of the infrastructure projects in Africa, South America, and Eastern Europe? They are ready and waiting for the USD to blow up.

            • @[email protected]
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              11 day ago

              Using crypto as the main currency would require too much of most people. Let’s not forget how many people who need to use currency but who are illiterate, who have trouble using websites or phones, etc. Crypto is not accessible to large segments of the population, and in that sense it is impractical and clearly not better than other currencies.

              Let’s also not forget that crypto was specifically designed to prevent monetary policies from being able to influence the currency. Not only is crypto impractical for much of the population, but the government will have fewer tools to stabilize the value of the currency. It’s a nightmare on many fronts.

      • @[email protected]
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        3 days ago

        Learn how to spin up a monero node and stick it on the tor network. Only buy bitcoin and wash it with monero for transactions.

        Don’t gamble on shitcoins.

        Don’t get caught up in mining or NFTs

          • @[email protected]
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            3 days ago

            Bury your reichmarcs in your mattress if you wish. We’re all trying to navigate this with the coping mechanisms we have.

            My tor node is accessible outside of the US as is my ability to get there if things need be.

            But right now I need a secure way to get funds to people in red states whose finances might be tracked so that they can get the gender affirming care in states that still allow it, or so they can move to states that aren’t actively trying to kill them.

            And right now this is the safest way to get them funds that cannot be interfered with or traced by state or federal governments.

          • @[email protected]
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            -23 days ago

            That’s the brilliance of crypto: it can work even on paper. Without the internet, it’s a major pain in the ass, but trades are still possible by using good old fashioned paper ledgers.

        • @[email protected]
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          33 days ago

          I don’t really know anything about crypto, but I’ve heard for many years how criminals use it to ransom things. I’ve always thought the “bitcoin is anonymous like cash” angle never made sense, since the entire point of the blockchain is to record ALL of it, and eventually that paper trail is going to tie it to someone. (It sounds like I’m somewhat correct about that since you mention “wash[ing]” it.)

          I’ve never heard of monero. How does that work with the washing and whatnot? It’s a whole world I know nothing about, but find interesting.

          • @[email protected]
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            22 days ago

            horse_battery_staple has a more comprehensive comment than this one:

            Yeah bitcoin is public, but anonymous (until the very first time you interact with some account in your name). Monero, in short, is like bitcoin but with washing is built into every transaction. It’s far, far from perfect (like all current crypto-currencies), but is a meaningful improvement over Bitcoin (it also supports higher transactions/second).

            In my opinion, Bitcoin and Monero are the only crypto-currencies worth engaging with at this time. I haven’t looked into Etherium or Solana, mostly because the idea of ‘decentralized apps running on the chain’ seems like beyond ludicrous scope creep for the problem of ‘minimal trust currency’. The one thing they do right is the Proof of Stake transaction confirmation algorithm, which is much more energy (and CO2) efficient than Proof of Work as used by Bitcoin and Monero.

          • @[email protected]
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            3 days ago

            That’s a long conversation. Please allow me to share a YouTube video that gets to the crux of the issue first. And I can share technical docs afterwards.

            However you are 100% correct. Bitcoin is anything but anonymous. XMR/Monero is and has always been fully cryptographic, with the minor issue that if someone controls a node you connect your wallet to, there is metadata that will out you.

            I don’t agree with everything this guy says about politics or social issues but he’s correct on netsec issues.

            https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=QrHsFZBab4U

            https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=nDBHhz00vjI

            As far as anonymizing your bitcoin you’ll need to do your own research. But here’s how not to do it.

            https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=7CD_Nl3iwhE

            If you’re gonna do that research do it on an updated tails distro as the previous release was compromised.

            https://tails.net/install/index.en.html

            • @[email protected]
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              33 days ago

              Thanks for the great reply! Super interesting stuff. I keep wanting to study up on all this crypto stuff since it seems like it’s not going anywhere at this point. Appreciate the links.

              • @[email protected]
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                13 days ago

                Don’t spend more than 20 bucks to figure out how it all works if you want to tinker. It is not a safe store of wealth. The best usecase is for anonymous and secure transactions.

  • Chozo
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    3144 days ago

    At what point do we declare this a coup? This isn’t what even the most diehard conservatives out there voted for, I don’t understand how this isn’t considered a hostile takeover.

    • @[email protected]
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      1564 days ago

      They’re in too deep to admit how badly they obviously fucked up. Shit is gonna have to actually reach the ugly bitter end, leaving them no other possible explanation to try to hide behind. In the meantime, this must be what it felt like for the citizens of Rome as it burned.

      • @[email protected]
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        454 days ago

        It is not until it affects them on a personal level they make that realization. That is how far the empathy of the average conservative voter reaches.

        • @[email protected]
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          134 days ago

          Well, in essence and at its purest level the difference in thinking between Leftwing and Rightwing is the difference between “I want people to have a better life” and “I want to have a better life”.

          All the political complexity above that comes from the different possible ways to achieve either end and from how one end partly overlaps with the other (i.e. for many a general improvement of people’s lifes gets translated into a personal improvement).

          So yeah, conservatives are just “What’s in it for me” types who believe in a different method to maximize their personal upside than the Fascists. In fact many American-style Liberals (the political version of “Liberal” in the US, not to be confused with those who believe in the actual Liberal Ideology) are also rightwingers who believe in yet another method for personal upside improvement.

          • @[email protected]
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            104 days ago

            Well, in essence and at its purest level the difference in thinking between Leftwing and Rightwing is the difference between “I want people to have a better life” and “I want to have a better life”.

            Not even that. The difference is between “I want people to have a better life (objectively speaking).” and “I want to have a better life (as compared to those people).” As long as their lives are better when compared to those people, the conservatives are satisfied. Even if everyone’s lives, including their own, get objectively worse.

            • @[email protected]
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              4 days ago

              I was going to say I partly disagree and that the “those people” element depends on the Society (i.e. different in different countries) but after thinking about it, I actually agree that wanting to be “comparativelly better” rather than better in absolute is a pretty general thing for rightwingers everywhere, and what changes in the countries I lived in is mainly they way they go about doing it (i.e. in England that overwhelmingly materialises in people spending a lot of time and effort in keeping those below them in the “prosperity ladder” from climbing up, whilst in The Netherlands there’s a lot less of that).

              So, yeah, thanks for pointing that out.

          • @[email protected]
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            13 days ago

            “I want to have a better life” does not encapsulate their zero sum game way of thinking. They ignore the possibility of a rising tide lifting all boats. It’s more appropriate to say “I want a better life than everyone I don’t like (our group).” Conservatives create an in group and out group that drives much of their agenda.

      • @[email protected]
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        624 days ago

        Fucking yes.

        All conservatives at the tables with all these nazis asking who voted in all the nazis.

        At this point your party has folded. Keep saying “but not meeeee, I’m a real conservative!” All you want.

      • @[email protected]
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        234 days ago

        Hungarian here, whose face got eaten by the leopards.

        Political illiteracy is a serious problem, and so is the access to information. They actually thought the crime rates were up, because the very few news outlets they’re exposed to likes to uplift a few cases with scary headlines, often making anniversary reports on some crimes. They actually thought, that the opposition was “too far-left”, because pundits told them so, and they learned in school the real nazis did evil things for the sole sake of evil, thus people that say they want to eliminate crime, and have crime statistics must not be far-right.

        This is not for to excuse their behavior, but to explain it. Maybe can even lead to an end of this cycle.

    • @[email protected]
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      354 days ago

      It’s stressing me out to no end. I think the average person doesn’t even know this is currently happening.

      • Maeve
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        164 days ago

        Very rural area dweller, here, two towns over doing errands. Just spoke with an elderly Mango Mussolini voter/Faux News consumer who already regrets his choice… I commented it’s time to stop voting to hurt others and vote for taxpayer dollars to help the common people, rather than billionaires. He agreed.

        • @[email protected]
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          124 days ago

          Not to shit on the guy too hard, but it’s a bit late on that front. I hope he’s around/remembers the next time someone courts his vote.

      • @[email protected]
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        164 days ago

        I don’t follow politics. I voted for trump because it was badass when he said fight fight fight. Elon’s a genius, I’m sure he’s gonna make it better.

        These are real takes I’ve heard out there in the world.

        • @[email protected]
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          44 days ago

          It doesn’t even need to be. So many of my friends have already decided to tune out completely because they’re sick of hearing about the nonstop shit.

    • @[email protected]
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      384 days ago

      When this happens in a developing country we laugh at their politics.

      When it happens in America, no one bats an eye

      • @[email protected]
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        204 days ago

        Americans still think their country is somehow different even though it’s still a developing country in many respects.

        • @[email protected]
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          94 days ago

          Not just country nations, reminder the regions with the strongest identities are either the oldest, important, or Mormon. We are very much kn the same state the late western Roman empire was in, where they had African Romance, Brithonic Romance, and Gaulic Romance we have Californian, Texan, and Northestern the east coast tracks to eastern Mediterranean.

  • WideEyedStupid
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    Can I ask? Why does Musk suddenly have this authority? “DOGE” isn’t even a real Department, right? And also, Musk hasn’t been elected or officially confirmed for any government position. Why the fuck is he giving orders and leading departments and having any power whatsoever over the U.S. Treasury and such? I don’t understand how this works. Why doesn’t the U.S. have any… I don’t know, safeguards against this sort of shit? It’s absolutely bonkers to watch this unfold from across the pond.

    Musk just walked up, said “I’m in charge now” and everyone’s just complying? Please ELI5.

    • Schadrach
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      42 days ago

      “DOGE” isn’t even a real Department, right?

      Technically, Trump just renamed the United States Digital Service to the United States DOGE Service, then created a child agency within it called the United States DOGE Service Temporary Organization reporting directly to the President (which USDS does technically anyways) and hired Musk as a special government employee as head of that. A special government employee is essentially expected to work less than 130 days in the next year and are normally used to fill short term needs, or as expert topic consultants for specific projects, that sort of thing.

      USDS is normally basically IT consultancy for other US departments, which is why he has access to a shocking number of keys to the kingdom, as it were.

      And also, Musk hasn’t been elected or officially confirmed for any government position.

      You don’t have to be confirmed by the Senate for most government jobs (just a specific named handful of high ranking positions, like the Secretaries of various Cabinet Departments), and he was basically given the highest possible position he could without needing to be confirmed by the Senate.

      Why the fuck is he giving orders and leading departments and having any power whatsoever over the U.S. Treasury and such? I don’t understand how this works.

      The President has final authority and power over the executive branch and over time increasing power has been placed in the executive branch largely because Congress didn’t want to fight over things every couple of years and the relative stability of a secondary agency staffed with experts was desirable for things like licensing radio bandwidth. USDS isn’t one of these agencies though - it was created by Obama in 2014 to help manage US IT stuff (and basically started from the team that fixed the healthcare.gov site in 2013) and didn’t need to be authorized by Congress because it doesn’t have rulemaking power over anything outside the executive branch and thus doesn’t require Congress to delegate power to it.

      As for why he’s giving orders and leading departments, legally he probably shouldn’t be but he’s also been assigned that power by Trump in a way that’s questionably legal. There are at least 3 lawsuits that have been filed arguing that it’s technically an advisory committee and in violation of the Federal Advisory Committee Act. I could totally see a federal judge agreeing with that, but it would eventually go to SCOTUS and we know who’s dick they sucked to get there.

      TL;DR: DOGE exists because it’s an existing department (US Digital Service) renamed DOGE, Musk was hired under that department in basically the highest spot that wouldn’t require Senate confirmation and because that department is essentially cross-departmental IT consultancy it gives him access to a shocking amount of federal IT resources. He isn’t being stopped because everyone involved ultimately reports to Trump and Trump has told him to do it. There are at least three lawsuits filed claiming the United States DOGE Service Temporary Organization is in violation of the Federal Advisory Committee Act, but since it’s only existed for like 10 days the courts haven’t really had a chance to even hear arguments about it yet.

      • WideEyedStupid
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        22 days ago

        Thanks for taking the time. So I guess it is all legal and Musk somehow does have all this authority… It’s bonkers, right? Doesn’t it somehow feel like the U.S. government has been running relatively well for a long time based solely on… the expectation of decency and norms, promises and gentleman’s agreements? There aren’t actual laws, checks or balances to avoid any of this, but it was sort of assumed that nobody in these positions would be pure evil. But then, once they’re in, they can do whatever they want.

        Courts are slow everywhere, that’s why it’s a good idea to have some rules and roadblocks, so that someone can’t just start dismantling everything on day one and courts have time to catch up before shit hits the fan.

        • Schadrach
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          22 days ago

          So I guess it is all legal

          It’s probably really not and the lawsuits probably have a good argument regarding the FACA, but courts are slow and Trump/Musk are basically steamrolling everything they can. An agency not given any delegated power from Congress functionally taking over and commanding agencies that do have delegated power from Congress probably has more than one means of legal attack against it. But courts are slow and any staff that challenge the Musk bulldozer have been relieved of their positions and escorted from their offices.

          And way too much of the public is cheering it on.

          • WideEyedStupid
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            22 days ago

            And way too much of the public is cheering it on.

            The most mind-boggling part imho. Trump and Musk doing all this shit doesn’t surprise me at all. Trump especially has been very clear about the things he wanted to do, Project 2025 wasn’t a secret either, and Musk… well, he’s been fascist-adjacent for a long time with his support for right-wingers the world over… But the fact that normal people can look at this and believe it will make their country better somehow is insane to me.

    • @[email protected]
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      193 days ago

      Trump said he’s in charge in a private capacity

      The Supreme Court is yet to say it’s not allowed

      • Hildegarde
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        73 days ago

        It takes months if not years for a case to be appealed to the supeme court. They don’t even accept most cases.

        Any court federal can issue an order on this if a case is brought. Courts cannot do anything unless asked. That’s kind of how the legal process works. Someone, or some AG will file a suit. Might take a few days or weeks.

        • Schadrach
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          22 days ago

          Three suits have already been filed arguing DOGE violates the Federal Advisory Committee Act. But like you said, the courts take time and DOGE has only existed for like 10 days.

        • @[email protected]
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          43 days ago

          It takes months if not years for a case to be appealed to the supeme court. They don’t even accept most cases.

          I’m old enough to know how Bush beat Gore

          They will keep doing this through the appeals process

    • @[email protected]
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      133 days ago

      He doesn’t. However, that is only according to this pesky technicality called “the law”. If the President does not want to follow the law, and appoints people who also do not care for following the law, then the law stops being a thing to look for for authority; and Musk can do this because Trump says he can.

      In the short term, expect this to be shut down by the courts. In the medium term, a bunch of these orders will end up in front of the Supreme Court that unironically said “if the president does it, it might be illegal, but he is absolutely immune from prosecution”. Even if the SC come down on the only legally defensible position, Trump could still say “them and what army”

      This is 100% a coup by Trump to centralize power in the executive. When staging a coup, “authority” is merely an inconvenience.

    • @[email protected]
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      123 days ago

      Everyone is not “just complying,” two security directors of USAID were dismissed when they tried to stop the musky henchmen.

    • @[email protected]
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      2 days ago

      We do have safeguards. They’re all being removed one by one by the party in charge. I’m guessing that some just comply because they figure it’s inevitable. On the other hand we have a long history of allowing people in power to do what they want. Bush walked into Iraq, we’ve had many military actions in many countries but haven’t declared war since world war II.

      Or maybe Musk is just pushing the boundaries before he’s deported. LOL.

      EDIT: changed WWIII to the intended WWII.

    • @[email protected]
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      03 days ago

      Because our government is filled with a bunch of geriatric FUCKS who don’t give a shit and whose whole personality is ‘fuck you I got mine’. There are checks and balances and this could be stopped if anyone was fucking useful to any capacity. We shouldn’t have to rise up in the streets or deal with this as that’s the whole god damn point of the gov. But because we allowed corporate interests to infiltrate and line the pockets of these assholes, along with there being no term limits, this is what we get.

  • @[email protected]
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    574 days ago

    Good to know that our elected officials in the legislative branch are no longer able to create laws that are actually enacted.

    This shit is outside the scope of the presidency.

  • @[email protected]
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    1384 days ago

    Oh please start halting payments to government contractors. This guy starts holding payments to Lockheed Martin and Raytheon he’s going to wind up real Dead real quick

  • AJMaxwell
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    1114 days ago

    This is a great way to end up on the military-indistrial complex hitlist

  • @[email protected]
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    474 days ago

    Musk is himself a giant government contractor via Space X and Starlink. Odds are he’s just trying to clear the board to funnel the money to his businesses. Especially when it comes to defense money!

  • @[email protected]
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    414 days ago

    Remember when people were posting articles on how stupid and ridiculous DOGE is because it wouldn’t have the authority to do anything?

    • @[email protected]
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      So I was looking at this today. It looks like a combination of serendipity and malicious behavior. The US Digital Service was effectively leaderless on Jan 20 when it was renamed DOGE. That’s the serendipity. But it was already “excepted service” under the president instead of a congressionally chartered agency. So they could (and likely would have) simply fire any leadership.

      USDS’ purpose was to fix computer systems all over the government. And it was doing a great job of that. But in order to do that it does get access other agencies don’t. This is where the malicious part comes in. Trump turns them into DOGE and links them with lawyers and HR people. They use their existing access authorization to get into systems and then do HR stuff instead of systems engineering. Furthermore they aren’t currently funded, which means they shouldn’t be operating at all. Their last funding ran out in September.

      Trump can just appoint people to it because he has a wide ranging authority to do temporary hires. Another malicious catch though is Musk is clearly operating DOGE but he hasn’t been put on payroll.

      This is illegal, and there are lawsuits already filed. But they’re counting on people not understanding the intricacies of the different kinds of federal service to enact their plan. Which to me is pretty transparently to force all agencies to submit to DOGE as a stand in for the White House and an end run around all laws about the civil service. Basically an unconstitutional power grab by the President.

    • @[email protected]
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      254 days ago

      Trump’s government is basically pay-to-play and Elon paid the most so he gets to do whatever he wants.

    • @[email protected]
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      144 days ago

      Because we’re all just people and at the end of the day some person is agreeing to not dispense the funds or not provide aid or to round up individuals … Until there is meaningful pushback by people who actually are carrying this bullshit out it won’t change.

      Idk same as how the Nazis managed the Holocaust, at the end of the day thousands of individuals agreed and did their part to exterminate the Jews. Same as how Israel now is committing an ongoing genocide in Gaza with their military and all those individuals are carrying out their orders.

      Authority, like many other things in our society, is an emphemeral concept we all agree to. Authority is given when we agree to abide by what that authority says. Same like our laws, sure we have laws against things but it’s not like those actually mean anything if they’re not obeyed by the majority. Nothing stopping you from doming Elon with the a large brick if you got one and can get close enough, you know what I mean?

  • @[email protected]
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    674 days ago

    Great way to get sued for breach of contract. This administration is going to be tied up in court for the next four years

    • @[email protected]
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      574 days ago

      Unfortunately, when all this stuff is resolved, it’s still the government that’s on the hook, not Musk personally. Although the new admin should probably just impound all of his and Trump’s assets to pay for the fallout, but obviously Democrats would never do anything this based.

      • @[email protected]
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        24 days ago

        I agree Democrats won’t do anything but Musk is playing at the level where he’s not protected like that. All of this could easily end up in a public corruption case if he steps a single foot wrong.

    • @[email protected]
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      254 days ago

      Do you really think this is going to play out in a court? They don’t care about the law and are actively plowing through them at will.

      • skulblaka
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        64 days ago

        Yeah I don’t see LockMart and Raytheon taking that sitting down. Musk thinks he has power, he doesn’t really. The MIC runs American finance.

          • skulblaka
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            44 days ago

            Ah of course they did

            Maybe the one intelligent decision this group has ever made

          • @[email protected]
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            34 days ago

            That’s not going to matter. There are some absolute giants in the contracting world and they’re not going to take this lying down.

  • @[email protected]
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    Does anyone know what the story is behind this charity he’s mentioning?

    Edit: looks like they feed and provide shelter for asylum seekers, and obviously he’s against that.

    • @[email protected]
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      4 days ago

      Because Putin wants rid of it.

      U.S.A.I.D. funds democracy-promotion programs around the world, including in European countries where right-wing populist movements are thriving. Mr. Musk has become an ally of those movements, some of whose leaders have specifically targeted the agency’s pro-democracy programs in recent years.

      Supporters of Viktor Orban, the right-wing leader of Hungary and a darling of pro-Trump conservatives in the United States, have personally criticized Samantha Power, who led U.S.A.I.D. during the Biden administration, for trying to import American values into their country.

      NY times gift link

      • @[email protected]
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        23 days ago

        I’m talking about the Lutheran charity mentioned. USAID is part of the soft power projection and regime change machine of the state department.