How Donald Trump and Elon Musk Could Cut $2 Trillion in Government Spending
If Musk is truly serious about fiscal discipline, he'll advise the president-elect to eschew many of the policies he promised on the campaign trail.

Elon Musk has thrown down a $2 trillion gauntlet, claiming he can slash federal spending by that amount. While the billionaire's proclamations on X often generate more heat than light, one can only hope he will succeed.
The real question isn't whether we can cut $2 trillion from a bloated $6.8 trillion federal budget—we absolutely can. After all, the government managed to function at $4.4 trillion five years ago, and American civilization didn't collapse. The economy was humming, wages were rising, and poverty was falling.
The fact that it's feasible, however, does not mean Musk will actually succeed. Before Washington's army of spending defenders, many of them Republicans, starts wailing about draconian cuts, let's discuss the actual question: how to trim the fat without harming the muscle.
Theoretically, one of the most straightforward budget-cutting approaches is an across-the-board or uniform-reduction rule. There is plenty to cut everywhere in the budget, including the large slice that funds the Department of Defense. The Congressional Budget Office's biennial Options for Reducing the Deficit lists reductions to the Pentagon's budget that would save $995 billion over ten years.
The best way to cut $2 trillion out of the budget is to ax everything the federal government does that it shouldn't be doing in the first place. It's time we rediscovered the exercise of thinking critically about government and the role it should or shouldn't play in our lives. Questions like, "Is that the role of government?" or "Should the federal government pay for that?" haven't been seriously considered in years. The muscle of fighting for first principles has atrophied among Republicans as it's no longer in style to call for small government.
Once you ask these questions, it's obvious that most of what the government does, it shouldn't. For instance, there's a lot of spending that goes to activities that are supposed to be the states' responsibility under our federalist model of government. Thus, federal grants-in-aid to the states are the first programs I would cut. These grants assault federalism, create perverse incentives, and reduce state and local government efficiency and accountability.
Take, for example, federal grants to state education departments. Federal aid incentivizes schools to shift their priorities to meet federal grant requirements rather than local educational needs. Schools also waste time and money complying with these complex federal requirements. Another example is federal transportation grants, which prompt states to build mass transit systems to get federal matching funds when roads might better serve their communities. There are plenty more examples.
The Cato Institute's Chris Edwards calculates that "federal aid to the states totaled $721 billion in 2019." That number exploded during COVID-19 and, like everything else, has remained elevated. According to the National Association of State Budget Officers, federal funds accounted for 35 percent of total state spending in fiscal 2023. If I were in charge, I would end most federal subsidies to the states and, at the very least, suggest serious reforms, such as block-granting Medicaid spending.
Next, I would end federal spending on programs and functions that subsidize the private sector. For one thing, it's not the role of government to finance private commercial interests. The case against privileging private companies with federal money also has an economic and ethical angle. From an economic perspective, when the government intervenes by funding particular private companies, it distorts the market's natural allocation of resources based on merit and consumer preferences. Companies should succeed by best serving customers rather than by currying political favor—a dynamic that encourages wasteful lobbying and cronyism rather than productive innovation. The beleaguered aerospace giant Boeing is a good example.
The ethical issue is equally compelling. It's fundamentally unfair to force taxpayers to invest in private companies against their will, especially when the arrangement typically privatizes profits while socializing losses (think bank bailouts during the Great Recession). It also undermines support for a market economy, creating the impression that capitalism rewards politically connected companies at the expense of regular Americans.
Several years ago, I calculated that federal "corporate welfare" amounted to approximately $150 billion annually. That number included farm subsidies, manufacturing subsidies, and government businesses like Amtrak. It also included agencies subsidizing private companies, such as the Small Business Administration, the Export-Import Bank, and the Department of Commerce. That number has undoubtedly grown with the Biden Administration's green energy and billions of dollars for companies like Intel to build semiconductor fabs in the U.S. that they would have built anyway.
Many of the other tax expenditures (targeted tax breaks, often to special interests) should similarly be eliminated. Between 2021 and 2024, the cost of these breaks grew from $1.2 trillion to nearly $2 trillion so there's plenty to go after. These carve-outs also make the tax code more complicated, less efficient, and more unfair. These new tax subsidies include tax breaks for green energy companies and electric vehicle consumers.
The federal government's subsidies to health care companies should be a target. Health care spending is a significant driver of our future debt and should be on the budget-cutting table. Health care subsidies have fostered a complex web of market distortions that inflate costs while obscuring actual prices. The pharmaceutical industry, for example, benefits from federal research grants from the National Institutes for Health and some tax credits for drug development. Insurance companies profit from Affordable Care Act premium subsidies while benefiting indirectly from employer-provided insurance tax advantages. And medical device manufacturers cash in through research grants, tax credits, and preferential government procurement policies. The result is a health care industry in which competition is stifled, innovation follows political rather than market incentives, costs are shifted to taxpayers, and market signals are so distorted that providers and patients cannot make informed economic decisions.
Ending all corporate welfare should be a priority. However, there is reason to be concerned that Musk will indulge in favoritism and instead seek to remove subsidies for companies considered enemies while doubling down on subsidies for the administration's friends.
Plenty of tax subsidies going to individuals are problematic, too. They mean that two taxpayers making the same income don't pay the same amount on taxes depending on whether they engage in activities that please the government, like having children or buying an electric car. President-elect Donald Trump's 2017 tax reforms limited mortgage interest and state and local tax deductions, but they should be terminated entirely.
Also on the cutting list should be tax preferences for employee health benefits over wages, which put upward pressure on health care demand and, thus, prices. Another target should be the federal government's substantial subsidies to Medicare Part B beneficiaries. Beneficiaries pay premiums that only cover one-quarter of the costs, with the other three-quarters paid by the taxpayer. In general, only a tiny percentage of all health care spending is financed from the consumer's pocket. Taking away the incentive for consumers to factor in costs when making health care decisions results in overutilization and, thus, unnecessary spending relative to a market system.
But let's be honest here. If Musk is truly serious about fiscal discipline, he'll advise the president-elect to eschew the headline policies he promised on the campaign trail. According to the Committee for a Responsible Budget, Trump's proposed policies would add $7.7 trillion to the debt over the next 10 years, including $1.05 trillion of interest costs (those figures are net of new tariffs revenue). While extending many of the 2017 Trump tax-cut provisions scheduled to expire next year would boost growth, campaign proposals (like no tips and overtime pay taxes, a tax credit for first-time homebuyers, etc.) would be special interest giveaways.
Cutting $2 trillion from the federal budget should be easy. Of course, it will be anything but, given Congress' continued lack of interest in discussing spending cuts and the president's sorry track record. If anything, let's hope this Musk-led effort to cut spending will hopefully reintroduce seemingly forgotten rationales for cutting the federal budget.
Editor's Note: As of February 29, 2024, commenting privileges on reason.com posts are limited to Reason Plus subscribers. Past commenters are grandfathered in for a temporary period. Subscribe here to preserve your ability to comment. Your Reason Plus subscription also gives you an ad-free version of reason.com, along with full access to the digital edition and archives of Reason magazine. We request that comments be civil and on-topic. We do not moderate or assume any responsibility for comments, which are owned by the readers who post them. Comments do not represent the views of reason.com or Reason Foundation. We reserve the right to delete any comment and ban commenters for any reason at any time. Comments may only be edited within 5 minutes of posting. Report abuses.
Please
to post comments
Just take a list of cabinet positions, and a copy of the US Constitution, and eliminate everything without a clear constitutional authorization.
Job done.
Not far enough.
Incidentally, it's all well and good that Reason posted this article. But one has to wonder why they didn't post it BEFORE the election. It was just as true then, and it may have helped inform the votes of small government, freedom-loving people. Or is that not what Reason is trying to accomplish?
I'm just shocked they posted anything even slightly positive at all.
Right? Did they even public any articles before the election? If they did, shouldn’t they have posted this one? And a few of the others they’re publishing now. Really, they should have published all their articles relevant to US politics before the election. Any article that is published tomorrow: should have been before the election! And the next day. And the next. Everything should have been published before now.
Lack of ideology led DJT to follow others on COVID lockdowns and stimulus, and will predictably lead to more spending / GDP, not less. Worth noting that government expenditures / GDP rose during Trump I from 21.7 to 21.9 percent -- before COVID (2017Q1 - 2019Q4).
The Trump admin will borrow another 5 trillion dollars minimum. Neither of the primary candidates was going to reduce spending one iota.
Only $5T in net new debt would be a miracle, frankly.
Seeing how the current administration is pissing away $1 trillion every 100 days, that would be an improvement.
Debt / GDP rose during Trump I and fell under Biden, who I didn't vote for. See https://fred.stlouisfed.org/seriesBeta/GFDEGDQ188S.
That number is kind of meaningless when the GDP growth is mostly in the government sector though, right?
Here's a chart that shows annualized quarterly real change in GDP less the contribution of government spending: https://fred.stlouisfed.org/graph/?g=1zCQP. Thankfully, GDP growth is definitely not "mostly in the gov sector" (its from "spending" -- personal consumption expenditures). That said, we can all prob agree that the ideal number for growth in government spending and investment is zero!
It actually needs to a a negative number for quite a while.
St Louis fed.. lol.
They have made tons of corrections to their economic data the last few years, always against the narrative.
Why did you choose that one specifically? It is the one democrats seem to favor over others.
FRED is an aggregator. Data comes from hundreds of other sources, public and private. The same databases could be used to show, for example, that the Reagan years really were amazing, the Obama years mediocre, and the Trump I years among the worst in the post WWII era by any objective economic measure -- except inflation, which was, incidentally, taking off before Biden took office (of course he made it worse). Note that the m/m change in PCE inflation started trending up in 2020: https://fred.stlouisfed.org/graph/?g=1A6dG.
Sorry.
P.S., Never voted Dem in my life, for any office.
Here's a hint; steaming piles of TDS-addled shit like you should FOAD, asshole, regardless of your voting record.
No, most of our ‘growth’ under Biden was fueled by government grants. He was strangling the private sector, as is the democrat way.
"the contribution of government spending"
An oxymoron if there ever was one!
70% of spending increases prior to covid were spending on the debt and increases to entitlements. Nothing Trump endorsed. It was McCain who blocked ending ACA including Medicaid expansion.
Source Eric Boehm.
The Don has learned from his past mistakes and with advisors like Elon he will MAGA in all respects.
I'd give 50/50 odds of the Musk/Trump bromance lasting to next summer.
What about 49/51?
Nope. 50/50
What about 51/49?
50.4/49.6 is as high as I'll go with 99.6% confidence
Wow. What were the odds of that happening?
50/50
What about 49/51?
Nope. 50/50.
Need an amendment to the constitution that would prohibit Congress from delegating legislative and judicial power to the executive.
An amendment to make that clear would help but a Supreme Court decision saying the same thing would probably be sufficient.
Not that the current court would ever do it but, hey, ya gotta dream.
They overturned Chevron which is a similar issue.
Chevron was a very, very tiny step in that direction.
Your democrat overlords will never allow that. But you’ll still bla,e Trump no matter what.
Does your stupidity hurt your head? Because it hurts mine.
Your stupidity hurts your head? Are you sure it isn’t the bottom shelf booze?
I conservatively the times your brain power. And now that you’ve managed to respond. Maybe you would like to follow up on your threats.
‘Ten times’.
And we all knew it. You don’t mute anyone. You’re just a coward.
Eliminate the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms, and Explosives (BATFE).
The licensing and tax collection functions of BATFE can be handled by another group within Treasury, while the law enforcement and lav functions can be handled by the FBI or some other federal agency. (Not that I hold any brief for the FBI, either in terms of policing or forensic science. That's a whole 'nother can of worms that needs to be addressed. I just think the BATFE is a redundant and unnecessary organization, and cutting them will help save $2 trillion.)
"Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms should be a convenience store not a government agency."
Add chainsaws to the mix and there's a store in Wyoming that does just that.
The one near where I grew up in SE Missouri also sells gas and ice cream.
Walmart does that.
Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms...oh, to be a teenager again...
I'll see your ATF and raise you a DEA.
Not entirely sure the details of their plan, but it will be great watching it happen.
Oh look, we became a Plutocracy overnight.
How does this comment make a lick of sense on any level?
It doesn’t. Shrike is still maneuvering through the five stages of grief, which is challenging since long TDS keeps patients stuck on stage 2 (anger).
It means Trump gives credence to whatever sycophant that whispered into his ear last; and that is clearly looking like Elon getting involved in things he has no business talking about in a barber shop, let alone speaking with people who should actually know what is going on.
While Liberty_Belle spouts her/his TDS-addled shit regardless of facts.
FOAD, asshole.
https://www.bbc.com/news/articles/cpqd4vw0ejeo
Why is Elon Musk becoming Donald Trump's efficiency tsar?
It’s gotta be painful for you that Trump is back and even your Soros backed DA’s are being cleansed by your fellow democrats.
Lol. To funny, but ummm....
Our breakdown records 83 billionaires supporting Harris and 52 backing Trump so far (see the lists for both below).
- Forbes
lol, wut?
Pluto is way out there in the solar system. I wouldn't worry about it.
It’s not even a planet anymore.
Fuck you ablists, it's a dwarf planet.
Get outta here lysenko. The Science has spoken.
What difference, at this point, does it make?
.
.
Veronica, those who can, do. Those who can't write snippy articles for Reason.
The WHOLE POINT of Trumpanzees and Muskovites infiltrating and wrecking the Libertarian party was so they could stain larger piles of legal tender greenbacks! Where in reality did Vero find contrary evidence? All either of those looters had to do to drastically cut spending was publicly and shamelessly vote for Chase Oliver! Doh!
Oh really Hank? If you want to know who wrecked the LP. Go look in a mirror. You’re just some retarded pinko obsessed with murdering babies and s creaming about Hebert Hoover.
Your bitch ass lost, and lost big this week. So why don’t you just have the good grace to drop dead?
I’d trade Hank to get Mike Hihn back.
Snort!
Snigger
Smirk.
Wow.
That's unhihnged, man.
I always wanted the two of them to fight to the death in a cage match.
I don’t believe Hank was ever actually a Libertarian.
Nope. He’s a Comstocker.
He’s probably stocked a lot of coms.
Questions like, "Is that the role of government?" or "Should the federal government pay for that?" haven't been seriously considered in years.
We'll see if Musk in fact involves "Dr. No".
If Elon/Trump can't figure it out, I know one man who can: Javier Milei.
Maybe they can borrow his chainsaw
They’ll have a crossover team up in season 2. For sweeps.
Figures you'd fall for that "tax expenditures" crap.
Sorry, but if you axe everything the Federal government is doing that it shouldn't be doing it would reduce the budget by 5 trillion dollars, not 2 trillion - and you wouldn't have to cut ANYTHING from the defense budget if you brought all the troops home, stopped the global war on everything and refurbished the Navy fleets who could still patrol the world better than they do now.
^THIS. Apparently the writer has his/her own 'favoritism' going on and National Defense isn't on the list even though it's in the Constitution.
You could do a big game show wheel where each wedge represents a 3 letter agency, give it a spin once a week to see which one gets deleted.
I'll save you the trouble: Musk doesn't give a shit about the deficit. He cares about government largess pouring money into subsidies for Teslas and to a lesser extent buying SpaceX rockets, because neither of these businesses makes any economic sense without the federal government. They don't make much economic sense as it is even with the current subsidy levels so I can only assume there is some kind of quid pro quo that was arranged with Trump to open the spigot wider.
One of three things is going to happen in the next 12 months:
1. Trump gives Musk his payback and MAGA loses its collective mind because their savior is going along with "big green agenda".
2. Trump gives Musk his payback and MAGA does a mental 180 on dime at how Trump is the most environment-loving president ever.
3. Trump doesn't give Musk his payback and Musk relearns the most important lesson in dealing with Trump that everyone else already knew.
What’s the downside for me?
I don’t know. Do you get a kind of cathartic schadenfreude from watching people do stupid things with entirely predictable results get exactly what you would expect but not what they expected? If so, I recommend popcorn.
If you don't, I guess a downside would be it could be kinda boring to watch.
So, ya got nothing.
I don’t know. Do you get a kind of cathartic schadenfreude from watching people do stupid things with entirely predictable results get exactly what you would expect but not what they expected? If so, I recommend popcorn.
I do. I just hope I have enough popcorn
Your TDS almost as intense as the emotional meltdowns from the betas on Libs of TikTok.
The government doesn’t buy spacex rockets, they purchase launch services from them.
And Starlink's revenue is a primary source of funding for SpaceX's Starship project.
Space X produces rockets at a cheaper rate than NASA spends to not create rockets.
At this point Musk has milked the government enough that he doesn't really need subsidies.
Cut the Depts of Energy, Education, HHS, Transportation, Homeland Security.
Reduce the FDA, ATF, and everything else by 75%.
Phase this in over 3 years so people can adjust. Half the first year, 25% each of the next 2 years. That way at least 75% is done before the next midterms.
Since when is me keeping more of my income a subsidy or a cost?
The obvious wild lefty-twist of today's Regime(ason) Libertarians.
Domestic Tax-Cuts = Subsidies! /s
Tariffs on the other hand. Can't be Subsidies even when they literally are (Shipping Subsidies).
Exactly. Allowing an individual to keep more of the money they earned should be celebrated as a reduction in theft.
“such as block-granting Medicaid spending”
I thought you were going to give common sense suggestions, not fantasy pipe dreams. That is never going to happen and shouldn’t. It’s one of the few things the fed government should be spending money on. At least while further efforts to reduce medial costs across the board. (at their source)
The medical rain has left long ago.. It’s time to drop the ghoulish fantasies about axing or majorly reducing them through sheer funding.
"In general, only a tiny percentage of all health care spending is financed from the consumer's pocket. Taking away the incentive for consumers to factor in costs when making health care decisions results in overutilization and, thus, unnecessary spending relative to a market system. "
Never going to happen, it shouldn't happen either. From an ethical, moral and practical standpoint. Even trying this ghoulish idea would end in a single payer system before you could even urn your head. This kind of utter nonsense will, has been and is delivering US society right into the hands of things even worse than a government helping it's people... socialists and communists! Plus even younger generations of conservatives are thankfully beginning to reject this kind of ruinous fantasy.
Why does the gov have to provide medical care?
The bigger question is how he thinks 'Guns' are going to 'provide' anything.
'Guns' don't do medical care. In fact medical care is usually a end-use requirement of Gun usage.
Isn’t everyone the Medicaid spending, that skyrocketed under COVID, covered already dead?
How bad could it be having everyone die *again* (or a third time if you count COVID *and* Climate change) rather than fall harder into the throes of communism like NotForNoReason seems to want to do?
It’s almost like this retarded “You just want people to die.” line stopped working a while ago (whether because people didn’t die or because everyone who believed it died I can’t say) and NotForNoReason still hasn’t caught up.
Just kill the communists. Then no more communism.
We could at least TRY that.
Because 'the market' is not even remotely going to deal with large groups of people - the destitute, the elderly, the terminally ill, the disabled, children, etc. Nor is 'charity' (which no libertarian is credible about anyway since they don't do charity). Those both failed already.
How do you know the market, or rather voluntary cooperation, won't handle medical care for the less fortunate? It's happened for much of human history, and it could very well happen again if the incentives change (that is, if the government no longer provides medical care).
Take away the 40% taxation, and people would have more money left to spend and donate, and the economy would be in much better shape, with fewer unemployed people.
Most conservatives seem to think Medicare is fine (since you "paid in"), but Medicaid is just welfare. To an extent that is true, but I'd argue that Medicare should be eliminated first. There's no reason for the government to provide a bloated and inefficient mandatory health insurance program for employed people. Private insurance companies could compete with each other to provide that.
Medicaid provides medical aid to the truly needy, so ending that abruptly would have severe humanitarian consequences. Medicaid is also a much smaller part of the federal budget than Medicare.
Friedrich Hayek in The Constitution of Liberty argued that supporting Social Security and Medicare (by getting the government involved in retirement and health insurance) were the biggest blunder for pro-freedom types, since they made a great mass of the people dependent on government checks. Welfare to the truly needy impacts only a small percentage of the population, Social Security and Medicare affect everyone.
No, you Marxists don’t do charity. Good people (non communists, including libertarians,) engage in philanthropy.
How do you get so STUPID???
"efforts to reduce medical costs across the board"
Medical costs use to cost as much as a Pizza.
Till Gov-Guns got involved.
Every F'En cost analysis under the Sun shows that.
Your 'affordable' Guns have done nothing but made it UN-Affordable.
Again; How do you get so STUPID???
“such as block-granting Medicaid spending”. I thought you were going to give common sense suggestions, not fantasy pipe dreams. That is never going to happen and shouldn’t. It’s one of the few things the fed government should be spending money on.
There is no benefit or value added of the federal govt creating a medical coverage program and spending money on it. It is purely political pandering and vote buying. There IS a value of state/local doing medical for those for whom 'the market' will fail. That is in fact where the US was going after the first iteration of medical care failed in the Spanish flu.
Charity hospitals failed then because the rich donors who built them (with tax deductions) did not want contagious people in THEIR hospital during a pandemic. So those hospitals sent the infected home to die there and spread the disease in those communities rather than in their hospital. So - munis started building hospitals. The result by the late 30's was that muni hospitals were full and the charity hospitals were emptying out. Which created a real problem for the rich donors - loss of tax deductions. So to undermine those muni 'socialists', donors got the federal govt to do its FIRST takeover of medical - to allow corporate tax deductions for employee medical care. Those donors - who owned companies - didn't care whether they were getting those tax deductions directly or indirectly. And that was a couple years before employer medical was made tax-exempt.
At any rate - the muni level is exactly the level where most medical coverage is delivered. Where the original insurance/financing systems - the Blues and Kaiser networks - could manage something. Where there exist real provider networks for ALL the demographics where the market will fail - elderly, terminal, disabled, destitute, children, etc.
The only value of the federal level in that sort of system is as a reinsurer, and the legislator for interstate compact issues (benchmarking, consistent treatment for US citizens across the different states, etc). But it is an interstate compact - not a federal program. So no exec branch involvement at all.
There is no benefit or value added of the federal govt creating a medical coverage program and spending money on it. It is purely political pandering and vote buying. There IS a value of state/local doing medical for those for whom ‘the market’ will fail. That is in fact where the US was going after the first iteration of medical care failed in the Spanish flu.
I don't understand a lot of the "federal govt doing it is bad, state govt doing it is good" thinking. Other than state government, in theory, being more responsive to particular local needs, what is this part of libertarian ideology about? If social welfare spending on health care is pandering and vote buying at the federal level, why wouldn't it be the same at the state level?
The only obvious consequence of doing away with Medicaid (and the other federal health coverage programs, like for children) and switching that to being entirely a state responsibility is that states with higher rates of poverty will have less money to help the poor with health care if they don't get a transfer from wealthier taxpayers in wealthier states.
I don’t understand a lot of the “federal govt doing it is bad, state govt doing it is good” thinking.
The question is - will government or private sector accomplish the job? In this case the answer - for the demographics who get coverage here in the US - is no it won't. So that medical care IS going to become a govt responsibility. I'll ignore the libertarian commentariat 'solution' where dying in the streets is an ok outcome.
I am not saying it is purely a state responsibility (meaning a purely ONE state in isolation responsibility). Rather the direct provisioning of that care is state or local level. That would clearly have some element of pandering - at that level. But because states can't use debt as their eternally free money tree - that would limit the pandering and force accountability at some point.
There would be no Obamacare - to either rally support for or opposition to at the federal level - but there would be 50 state level programs where states themselves could experiment to see what worked for them. Even FDR agreed with this approach (when he was Gov of NY - and the issue was prohibition) - it was clear to the framers of our Constitution that the greatest possible liberty of self-government must be given to each state, and that any national administration attempting to make all laws for the whole nation, such as was wholly practical in Great Britain, would inevitably result at some future time in a dissolution of the union itself.
The reason I mentioned interstate compact is precisely because that is the only constitutional basis for congress (but not the exec branch) to structure the ways states have to agree on things. States would need some level of reinsurance - but pols don't pander to actuaries. There would be some discussion re minimal provisioning for US citizens, people moving to/from those states, employers who have employees in multiple states, retirees who move to a state for retirement, etc. But that's a very different discussion when the state level is responsible for implementing the interstate compact and congress is merely structuring it (and holding it accountable for any funding).
it was clear to the framers of our Constitution that the greatest possible liberty of self-government must be given to each state, and that any national administration attempting to make all laws for the whole nation, such as was wholly practical in Great Britain, would inevitably result at some future time in a dissolution of the union itself.
And we are seeing the dissolution of the union (in part) before our very eyes.
Not a single dollar should go to California for any purpose whatever.
The biggest difference is the ‘Fed’ can print $. Literally STEAL from under the covers from the people without balancing a single register.
But I disagree that the State-Guns show anymore honor than Al’Capone is setting the socialism. If you need a babysitter; there’s a prison system in place for it.
Your problem is you think 'Guns' make sh*t. They don't.
And your mindset belongs in prison where like-minded 'Guns' make sh*t people are not in politics. Politics is to ensure Liberty and Justice for all; not some 'armed-theft' THEFT spree.
So those hospitals sent the infected home to die there and spread the disease in those communities rather than in their hospital.
Also known as the cuomo method.
No commenters here gave a shit about my suggestion to mobilize the militia to do stuff like building extra capacity. That suggestion is what places like Sweden, South Korea, Singapore, Taiwan, etc did.
FAILURE to do that - by D's like Cuomo or R's like your ilk - meant that in practice you ALL agreed to discharge patients who couldn't be helped in hospital when the hospitals got full.
They built tent hospitals and had the navy hospital ship in New York port. Both went unused.
"...No commenters here gave a shit about my suggestion to mobilize the militia to do stuff like building extra capacity..."
For the very good reason that your suggestion once again tells us that:
You.
Are.
Full.
Of.
Shit.
FOAD, asshole.
"...It’s one of the few things the fed government should be spending money on. At least while further efforts to reduce medial costs across the board..."
Tell us which article of the Constitution relates to providing medical care, or FOAD, asshole.
easier said than done
Can do!
1. Eliminate cost pluse contracts. The mic and dod budget will be reduced by about 40% saving 360 billion a year.
2. Execute the traitors in the cia, nsa, doj, hhs, dol, for crimes against humanity.
Hhs discretionary is 170 billion, and 1.7 trillion mandatory. Cia is 15 billion, doj is at least 30 billion.
3. Eliminate all ngo funding. 50 billion
4 eliminate all foreign aid and military backing, including un, ~400 billion.
Contractors get higher profit margins on fixed price contracts because all risks are built into the cost of contracts.
I assure you they don't. Cost plus the motto is "our product is billable hours"
My bad, fixed price the profit margin is higher, but the overall cost is much much lower.
Example, I had a fixed cost program of 2 mil, we spent 1.6, profit of 400k profit of 20%
A cost plus program was cost plus 10% went 100mil over budget "profit margin" was 10% but the cost overrun was 100mil, on top of initial cost. The margin was still half of my fixed price, but because they managed to bill a ton of extra hours, bonus money!
Yes, but 20% is excessive profits. You were “gouging” by being efficient. Even though I’m sure it was competitive bid.
That's not how cost plus fixed fee contracts work. The fee (profit) is fixed after award as a dollar value (payable in accordance with deliverables completed or man-hours provided) but it is not a percentage of costs incurred.
Executing the other party's employees sets a bad precedent though. Just fire them.
When did Libertarians get so cynical about human nature? My concept of Libertarianism is to show what is possible but unleashing human potential. Yet it seems every article in this cycle is weighed down by your biases about the perceived malintended motives of both parties. If this is in fact the case, you can give up now. Those are the people in charge and they're not going anywhere. Give them some credit that they might actually mean what they say and your cynicism is misplaced.
I do believe the very Reason for the R-Wave was to end all the ‘green energy’ corporate-grift and trillions in personal & state subsidies.
Not as-if that doesn’t encapsulate practically the entire Democrat platform. (i.e. “He hollowed out our public institutions!!!”, “OMG! Trump is so Bad.”)
Maybe Reason writers would figure that out once they acknowledge the *wild contradiction* in calling Domestic Tax-Cuts Subsidies/Favoritism while they label a Zero-Tax on imports the most important thing.
It has been interesting and also very disappointing to see the Libertarians reaction to the most Libertarian president ever elected in the last century. Tax-Cuts are subsidies/corporate-favoritism now??? WTF?? Why it’s almost like your TDS flipped all your principles on their head.
There are a lot of federal bureaucracies and agencies that need to be defunded and disbanded.
I would also recommend ending all subsidies, grants, foreign aid, as well as pulling out the UN and NATO.
A sane person couldn't cut enough of the federal government fat.
Grants are out of control. San Francisco, the highest median income city in the U.S., a playhouse for the wealthiest people on planet earth gets 400 million from federal taxpayers:
https://sfstandard.com/2024/11/07/daniel-lurie-wins-san-francisco-mayor/
“Perhaps even more daunting: at least $400 million of San Francisco’s annual budget comes from the federal government, the purse-strings of which will soon be held by president-elect Donald Trump. “
Easy, San Francisco should stand on principle, and refuse any money from Orange Hitler.
Can’t we just round them up and send them to Antarctica in shipping containers?
Cut $2 Trillion and the entire economy will crash.
It’s non productive spending.
It's counter-productive spending.
All those accountants, lawyers, mid-level managers, and such can pick lettuce or the garbage from the highways. $15/hr is a living wage, and more than they deserve.
Huge news. Pritzker, Illinois releases statement that Trump will have to get through him to mess with Illinois (without a hint of irony or fat pun intended)
Are you saying he just made himself into a big target?
Pritzker has a harpoon target on his back
He's fat. LOL
Pritzker is Pedo Jeffy’s spirit whale.
Says the states who fell all over themselves conceding authority to the Federal government over the last several decades in order to claw back some of their lost tax revenues siphoned off by that Federal government in order to impose "voluntary" mandates with financial strings attached.
I have a good chiropractor if you hurt your neck on that vicious 180
To be blunt! People, who think cutting $2 Trillion from the federal budget would be a good thing, are macro-economic imbeciles.
Even aside from that, what is the actual increase in spending in recent years been going toward? De Rugy points out that fiscal 2024 is 6.8T while fiscal 2019 was 4.4T. How does that break down? How much of the increase is increased interest payments on higher debt at higher rates? That's not something that $2T in cuts could come from. You think Trump and Republicans in Congress would actually allow SS and Medicare to see significant cuts given the demographics of the GOP base? Non-defense discretionary spending isn't even $2T in total.
The historical avg for the federal budget as a % of GDP is around 21%, which is what it was in 2019. 21% of the 2024 projected GDP of $28T is $5.9T So, federal spending is $900 billion over the historical fraction of GDP. A big chunk of that is increased debt servicing costs. There is no question that $2T in cuts is simply libertarian fantasyland.
It's so unrealistic that it was possible 5 years ago?
The answer is obvious: freeze spending at current levels and let federal tax revenues catch up. It would have worked 5 years ago.
Interest payments have gone up significantly, but they will continue to go up if the deficit isn't brought under control, and raising taxes would crush the economy.
Government spending shouldn't maintain a steady percentage of GDP, it should decline over time. The government has a few authorized functions, which should become a smaller and smaller percentage of GDP as the economy grows and diversifies.
Jason believes government is what makes the economy go. I know many of his ilk. They even believe that endless unconstitutional regulations are actually an economic stimulus, instead of a crushing lodestone.
This obviously doesn’t work. At all. And the electorate reacted to this and so many other utterly failed democrat policies.
The real question isn't whether we can cut $2 trillion from a bloated $6.8 trillion federal budget—we absolutely can.
The real question I see, when it comes to Elon Musk, is how is it remotely possible for the literal world's richest man to be directly involved in the U.S. government without massive conflicts of interest? SpaceX, and NASA's dependence on it? Telsa, and the large government subsidies electric vehicles get? The social media platform formerly known as Twitter, and the reach it has to influence public opinion?
He is also one of the world’s most successful people. We should tap into some of that expertise. Being the richest person on the planet is not an incentive to dip into the till.
Being the richest person on the planet is not an incentive to dip into the till.
You really think that someone gets to be a billionaire of any amount if they aren't highly motivated by money? If nothing else, it is a measuring stick. Getting richer means they are even more successful than they already were!
Also, money = power, and people like Elon that think very highly of their own value never get tired of acquiring more of that.
He is also one of the world’s most successful people. We should tap into some of that expertise.
And also, wasn't one of the great things about Trump that he was so rich? It was supposed to be a sign of his success and also an indication that he couldn't be bought. How accurate did any of that turn out to be?
Was he bought?
I don't know, maybe?
https://www.cbsnews.com/news/trump-foreign-payments-emoluments-clause-house-democrats/
LOL
I wasn't trying to be funny. You know that Trump is the first major party Presidential candidate in over 40 years not to release at least the most recent few years of his tax returns. That he didn't even put his business interests in some kind of blind trust, let alone divest from them. There is also the obvious reasons why Saudi Arabia invested $2 billion with Jared's newly formed company that had little experience.
I suppose you bought a Trump Coin to go with your Trump Watch so that you can enjoy the returns on your Trump Media stock as well. You know, the same Trump Media company that owns Truth Social that didn't even take in $1 million in revenue last quarter. Yet TMP is supposedly worth over $3 billion on paper. It's a volatile meme stock that only has value because of his personal popularity, not because it is a fundamentally profitable business. He tweeted this morning about not having any interest in selling, and boom, his stake in the company shot up $500 million in value. Why? Had he lost, it would be worth nada. Seriously, how much more obvious can his grifts be?
Envy will get you nowhere.
I see that you admire Trump because he is such an obvious grifter, if you think I envy him in any way.
I admire nobody, but your anger amuses me.
I don’t see how you got the impression that I am angry. Frustrated that you are this clueless, sure, but not angry. But, I guess owning the libs is what drives you in politics, so it makes sense that you would assume that.
You did nothing to counter my claims about Elon’s and Trump’s conflicts of interest, among other facts, so that is why I concluded that you understand completely that they do have such conflicts, and you just don’t care. I do find that to be difficult to understand. Especially with all of the airtime that the Bidens' supposed corruption got and how it was such a big deal to your side.
Tax returns should be between the taxpayer and the IRS, and the IRS should be abolished.
Presidents and Congressmen should be required to put their assets in a blind trust while they are in office.
Then why would anyone of any serious value want to run?
For the comparatively lousy pay? And giving up control of one's assets for several years? The very assets one has accumulated over the years by managing them carefully?
This is how we get people like AOC in office.
And giving up control of one’s assets for several years? The very assets one has accumulated over the years by managing them carefully?
Well, yeah. If you want to wield power in service of the public, then yes, the price of that is to not be actively managing investments.
Or is this some sort of judgement on your part that only people that have accumulated large sums of money to invest are good enough to hold elected office? And that people motivated by the accumulation of wealth are best suited to governing in the interest of the whole population?
I think your name is on target here. You must be kidding.
Start trimming the fat from the military.
The one thing the govt is actually supposed to do, its highest priority, is not where you start.
No complaints on the list. But I missed the part that stressed to eliminate welfare for illegals. Reason hasn't gotten the memo.....
I will go a step further. There is ZERO Constitutional authority for the Federal government of provide welfare, PERIOD. To the extent that is a legitimate government function, it is a STATE function.
Given the fact the NIH just spent $465,339. to teach pigeons to play slot machines, there's plenty of wood to cut here.
I don't understand your skepticism, this is everything the libertarians ever wanted and you act like they're going to mess things up. I know, wait until libertarians are elected to high office. And wait, and wait, and wait.
It's simple: there are only 4 cabinet posts which are Constitutional: Treasury; State; Justice; and Defense. Liquidate the other 11 cabinets and return those functions and the money to run them back to the respective States as mandated by the 10th Amendment. Start there.
Drill, baby, drill, and siphon off a small percentage of the profits to create a sovereign wealth fund. Ask Denmark for help. In 10 years, start transitioning the Social Security Ponzi scheme over to the sovereign wealth system rather than expecting a smaller and small cohort of working age Americans to support everyone else. Any politician that dips into the sovereign wealth fund is executed (I've thought this through) on national Pay-Per-View.
Close down K Street and the lobbyists, cement over the revolving door between defense contractors and federal bureaucrats. Cancel advertising for Big Pharma.
Get the federal government out of the social engineering business, not everyone wants a house, not every couple wants children. Let people live their lives without looking over their shoulders. Stop punishing evangelicals and Catholics for practicing their faith. Maybe they make some feel guilty, but that's on them.
Make government so small it can't threaten our very existence. Defend our country and its borders. That's it. We're not the World's Welcome Wagon.
It's just a start. Buck up, buttercup.
WTF? An actual libertarian article pushing libertarian ideas of smaller gov’t.
Have I slept till April 1st?
de Rugy for Treasury Secretary.
The best way to cut $2 trillion out of the budget is to ax everything the federal government does that it shouldn't be doing in the first place.
That would cut closer to $6 Trillion. Yes, I know I just said approximately 90% of federal spending is spent on things the federal government shouldn't be doing.
The first problem is that 6 trillion dollars today buys what 4 trillion dollars bought 5 years ago, thanks to 50% inflation (officially 20%, but let’s get real, we all know prices have gone up more than that.)
The second problem is that every program and every handout and every subsidy has a very vocal constituency who will squawk if the gravy train ends. Cutting programs is a great idea, and the only way to make significant progress, but the only program a majority of voters is in favor of reducing is foreign aid, which is around 1 percent of the budget.
The most practical way forward is an immediate spending freeze, which with inflation would be like an annual 5% spending cut in real terms. Politically, cutting the growth of spending to 1 or 2% a year is probably more realistic, and would eventually balance the budget as tax revenues grow.
A good first step that a Republican Congress and President could do is an immediate 5% layoff of all federal workers and a pay freeze, along with a hiring freeze. Let federal employment fall off through attrition and retirement. Many federal workers were identified as non-essential in the various temporary shutdowns, why are taxpayers still supporting them? The government employee unions are a big voting and political donation bloc, but they almost entirely support Democrats anyway, so Republicans wouldn’t lose much support by cutting there.
Phase outs are always better than immediate cuts. It gives time for all parties to adjust.
Hell, at this point if we could just stop INCREASING spending for 5 years, we'd come out ahead as revenues are about 5 years behind spending.
First, I don't like across the board spending cuts as these types of cuts penalize good programs and reward bad program. Take the time do the work and get rid of the bad programs. Cutting spending to states seems good till you realize that 7 of the top 10 states getting excess Federal funds are Republican controlled. Also, good luck getting rid of farm and business subsidies. Companies getting these subsidies have money which equal power. I wish Elon Musk well but don't hope for much. Fact is a couple of young accountants with few years of experience could do as well as Musk because the easy part is finding where to cut. The hard part is getting the cutting done.
Good luck getting anyone in the Democrat party, including most of the media to imagine a world in which "should the government pay for this" is a question that anyone could dare to ask.
Once the MSM gets done with the issue, the small portion of the public who still put any stock in what those outlets have to say will take to the streets "yellow vests" style in outrage over the slightest of "austerity" measures, such as hesitation in by Congress to appropriate a budget line-item to subsizde surcharges for oat milk at Starbucks and guac at Chipotle.
Reason's cuts are tiny and ignore the primary driver of spending and debt. SOCIAL SPENDING. Every single dollar of revenue now goes to 'human resources": social security, health, medicare, income support.
And the largest number mentioned isnt even spending, its "tax expenditures", a made up term.
"Many of the other tax expenditures (targeted tax breaks, often to special interests) should similarly be eliminated. Between 2021 and 2024, the cost of these breaks grew from $1.2 trillion to nearly $2 trillion so there's plenty to go after. "
Try again, reason.
As long as the public schools and the MSM keep most people as ignorant and misinformed as they currently are, there's not going to be much that can be done about the real problems until they collapse under their own weight and possibly take the rest of the system down with them.
Even many of the "tea party" protestors in 2009 who thought they were protesting to demand the shrinking of government were carrying signs reading "Keep Government's Hands off My Medicare". So many people have been taught to believe the lie that the money they're going to get out from Social Security is "the money they put in" (and that they're "entitled" to it because of that), the changes needed to convert that program into an actual safety net instead of a large-scale wealth transfer mechanism which sends the biggest payments to the richest recipients in many cases will never gain enough traction to be possible for any elected officials to enact. Not to mention that the Dems and their pet media outlets won't even acknowledge that their hardest stance of doing nothing will lead to forced 20% cuts in less than 10 years and that even the one change they're willing to consider (raising/eliminating the wage cap for tax applicability) will only postpone that outcome by an estimated 4-5 years.