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Government Spending

Elon Musk Discovers That Serious Spending Cuts Are 'Really Difficult'

As he shifts his focus away from DOGE, he acknowledges the need for hard choices and congressional action.

Jacob Sullum | 5.7.2025 12:01 AM

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Elon Musk at a Cabinet meeting | CNP/AdMedia/Sipa/Newscom
(CNP/AdMedia/Sipa/Newscom)

As recently as March 27, Elon Musk was still confident that the Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE), the cost-cutting initiative he unofficially headed, could reduce annual federal spending by $1 trillion. But during a Cabinet meeting two weeks later, Musk projected that the savings in FY 2026, when DOGE sunsets, would be more like $150 billion.

Even the latter, much smaller number cannot be trusted, because DOGE has been vague about most of its purported cuts and has repeatedly exaggerated the ones it has specified. And last week, as he shifted his focus from DOGE back to his businesses, Musk acknowledged a reality that should have been obvious from the outset: Any serious attempt to address the country's looming fiscal crisis will require hard choices and congressional action.

Shortly before last year's presidential election, Musk breezily estimated that DOGE could cut annual federal spending by "at least" $2 trillion, which was about the size of the budget deficit in FY 2024. At a press conference in February, he reduced that target by 50 percent, saying DOGE could "cut the budget deficit in half" by insisting on "competence and caring."

That goal was always improbable, since it would require eliminating something like 63 percent of discretionary spending. And although Musk said DOGE would be "as transparent as possible," the project's documentation of its work has fallen far short of that promise.

As of Tuesday, DOGE's website claimed $165 billion in "estimated savings" from "asset sales, contract/lease cancellations and renegotiations, fraud and improper payment deletion, grant cancellations, interest savings, programmatic changes, regulatory savings, and workforce reductions." But DOGE's "Wall of Receipts" described just $69 billion in spending reductions, accounting for 42 percent of the purported total.

News organizations have identified many problems with those "receipts." The errors include contracts that were not actually canceled, contracts that were terminated during the Biden administration, iffy estimates of savings on contracts that had not been awarded yet, contracts that were counted multiple times, conflation of contract caps with actual spending, the inclusion of past spending in estimates of future savings, and overvaluation of contracts and grants.

DOGE's hyperbole is so pervasive that Manhattan Institute budget expert Jessica Riedl describes its work as "government spending-cut theater," saying "most of what is claimed to be spending cuts are just accounting errors." Somewhat more generously, Nat Malkus, a senior fellow at the American Enterprise Institute, estimates that DOGE's actual cuts amount to about half of the total it claims.

"They're just spinning their wheels, citing in many cases overstated or fake savings," Romina Boccia, director of budget and entitlement policy at the Cato Institute, told The New York Times last month. "What's most frustrating is that we agree with their goals. But we're watching them flail at achieving them."

DOGE's numbers do not distinguish between one-time savings and recurring savings or between total savings and annual savings. Some of its categories, such as "workforce reductions" and "programmatic changes," are plausible but vague, while others, such as "asset sales" and "regulatory savings," do not seem to imply any spending reductions at all.

In early March, President Donald Trump claimed DOGE already had identified "hundreds of billions of dollars of fraud." Although that clearly was not true, such savings should be possible.

Last year, the Government Accountability Office estimated that "the federal government could lose between $233 billion and $521 billion annually to fraud." Still, there is only so much that can be achieved without addressing the major components of the federal budget, including health care, Social Security, and military spending.

"If we don't do something about this deficit," Musk warned in February, "the country's going bankrupt." Back then, he implied that DOGE was up to that challenge. More recently, he has been singing a different tune.

"It's really difficult," Musk conceded last week. The question, he said, is whether there is "sufficient political will in Congress and elsewhere." Now he tells us.

© Copyright 2025 by Creators Syndicate Inc.

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Jacob Sullum is a senior editor at Reason.

Government SpendingBudget cutsDOGEElon MuskFiscal policyBudget DeficitDeficitsNational DebtDebtGovernment WasteFraudContractingGovernment grantsTrump AdministrationDonald TrumpCongress
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  1. MollyGodiva   2 months ago

    Don’t forget that DOGE cuts to the IRS will cause the government to lose far more money than all the other “savings”.

    DOGE is a scam. The real purpose of DOGE is to install an unaccountable take over of the government. And Musk fleecing the government for personal profit.

    1. AT   2 months ago

      Don’t forget that DOGE cuts to the IRS will cause the government to lose far more money

      And now we know where you stand, Molly.

      1. MollyGodiva   2 months ago

        I stand against tax cheats. You want to lower taxes, fine, do it through Congress. But to just let people get away without paying what they owe is wrong.

        1. Get To Da Chippah   2 months ago

          But to just let people get away without paying what they owe is wrong.

          Is this also your stance regarding student loan debt?

          1. Quo Usque Tandem   2 months ago

            Crickets...

          2. Mother's Lament - (Sarcasian Meanister of Foreign Affairs)   2 months ago

            Yeah, Tony Godiva's never going to answer that one.

          3. MollyGodiva   2 months ago

            I don't recall any effort to cut down on the staff at student loan administrators to make it easy for people to just not pay.

            1. TJJ2000   2 months ago

              Molly, "Hey... We can pay a staff to do nothing & forgive the loan!"
              UR a leftard joke.

            2. DesigNate   2 months ago

              You literally advocated for Biden to just wipe a favored groups* student loan debt away.

              *What he was trying to do only applied to pubsec workers, you know, the democrats large donor and voting base.

              Also: Fuck you, it’s not your or their goddamn money that I’m working 60+ hours a week for.

            3. BenF   2 months ago

              Pay these Reason MAGAts no mind Molly. Their primary entertainment is posting idiotic comments between masturbatory sessions and online video games.

        2. damikesc   2 months ago

          "I stand against tax cheats. You want to lower taxes, fine, do it through Congress. But to just let people get away without paying what they owe is wrong."

          But what if he uses prosecutorial discretion by not prosecuting tax cheats? Worked for Obama re DACA.

          1. charliehall   2 months ago

            Idiot. There was nothing to prosecute. It isn't a crime to be in the US illegally.

            1. ddcannady   2 months ago

              If they are here "illegally", is that not definitively a crime? Your statement doesn't make sense.

        3. Freethinksman   2 months ago

          Do EVERYTHING legislative through Congress, like the Constitution dictates. For far too long both Reps and Senators have been more than content to let the courts make the tough calls. They craft vague legislation because no one has the balls to take a principled stance and put their name to a law which some primary voters might not like. The fear of being primaried on the Republican side of the aisle is so great that they have abdicated every decision-making power to the President. They won't do Town Halls because of how unpopular much of what the administration is doing, but the voters who actually show up for primaries demand their elected officials demonstrate complete fealty to hulking man-child. They know what he is doing to the country, but they like being whispered about and gawked at when they go to the country club even more, spineless fucking cowards.

          Elon and DOGE found it difficult to find money to cut because as much as we need to make significant cuts, they were looking in the wrong places. Of course there is fraud, but relative to the entirety of the federal budget it is infinitessimal. Abuse and waste are so hard to prove for two reasons, not the lesser of which is that those words were never defined, and different people have different ideas about what constitutes them. A fucking military parade, I think we can all agree, is both waste and abuse. No question about it. But finding those things in budgets approved by Congress itself begs the question of where the waste or abuse originated. So he had to misinterpret "Transgenic" to be "transgender" and then all of a sudden it makes sense. But halting NIH grants to universities actively researching life saving drug treatment is only waste when you can't find waste and still feel like cutting.

          The fact is the Trump administration, as per Project 2025, is trying to emasculate the powers of the federal government to return that power to the States. That's great. But then quit fucking running roughshod over States' rights when it doesn't mesh with the religious nutjobs close to Trump. If he fails it will be because he doesn't know what he is trying to do, and the special interests he has sold the White House to have very different goals. It is a given that at some point two of those groups' agendas will be in conflict. If it's over something big, any of them can derail this whole intentional derailment.

      2. Brian DuBridge   2 months ago

        But the goal is to save the money to The People, so that's a plus, and should be on the balance sheet as savings!

    2. BigT   2 months ago

      “And Musk fleecing the government for personal profit”
      Haha!! Musk has merely used ‘green’ programs to help fund some of his companies. Who put that crap in place?
      -Donkeys! Your brethren.

    3. Mother's Lament - (Sarcasian Meanister of Foreign Affairs)   2 months ago

      "And Musk fleecing the government for personal profit."

      No he isn't.

      Selling products like rocket rides for 10% of the price the competition charges is literally the opposite of "fleecing", you shitty shill.

      And yes, I know you clowns are trying to portray direct to consumer government rebates when people purchase ANY electric vehicle as some sort of "grant" to Tesla, which is mindbogglingly dishonest.

      1. Freethinksman   2 months ago

        SpaceX would not exist but for the patronage of the federal government. He is a fucking sponge.

        Tesla has been successful *only* because the consumer incentives paid for by the government. He is a fucking sponge.

        Elon is the single most government-dependent person in America. No one else is even in the running.

    4. Zeb   2 months ago

      You mean that the president (with assistance from his appointees and advisors) is taking over the executive branch? Well, I never!

    5. jabbermule   2 months ago

      This is the first serious attempt at reining in government spending in over 40 years, and all you can do is spew talking points you heard on The View and MSNBC? Please turn in your libertarian card now, you''re a disgrace to our movement.

  2. AT   2 months ago

    What is wrong in your brain, Sullum?

    Musk projected that the savings in FY 2026, when DOGE sunsets, would be more like $150 billion.

    OK, "libertarian." $150B in savings. Heck, even if it's just $69B in savings. Savings by cutting ACTUAL government waste and frivolity.

    And you have a problem with this because... he promised more, and realized that might have been a tad ambitious?

    This article - if it were written by literally anyone other than a MSM TDS NPC - would lead with, "Musk eliminated billions. Now it's Congress' turn."

    But you don't even TRY to even hint at that. You just declare it all a failure and a betrayal. You don't acknowledge the good it did. You don't applaud the opening of the books on government waste and graft and swindle. Because it's got Trump - vis-a-vis Musk's - name on it, you have to piss all over it.

    Still, there is only so much that can be achieved without addressing the major components of the federal budget, including health care, Social Security, and military spending.

    GREAT. I am waiting with baited breath for your oh-so-sourced (mostly by your own articles) article on how we should eliminate health care and social security spending. (I'm not including military, because that's a proper function of government, cry about it fag.)

    1. GroundTruth   2 months ago

      "Waste and frivolity" are unfortunately open to some interpretation. If you mean buying 3 times as many paperclips as you can use, then yes, it's waste. But, for example (making this one up, but it's typical of how proposals are written) if you mean terminating a study on how to make lab rats transsexual, you might need to read deeper into the project to find that the investigator put a catchy title on the proposal to get attention, but that it's actually designed to figure out why a rat might want to be transsexual to begin with, in the hope of figuring out what is wrong with the rat's brain.

    2. Brian DuBridge   2 months ago

      Social Security spending should be cut by not paying anything to illegal aliens who've never paid into it.

  3. Rick James   2 months ago

    Shyeah, no shit. When the leading "Abolish everything" Libertarian Publication is worried that a windmill might not get built, you bet your ass it's going to be difficult.

    1. MasterThief   2 months ago

      It really is a bizarre juxtaposition to look at their coverage now in light of their "abolish everything" series. Were they lying then or now?

      1. Social Justice is neither   2 months ago

        Then, absolutely then.

    2. Freethinksman   2 months ago

      If a libertarian publication is bent out of shape by the notion of giving an unelected bureaucrat the reins of the spending that the Constitution gives *exclusively* to Congress, it's doing its job. Waste is in the eye of the beholder. And an autistic demitard genius billionaire insecure loser *responsible for the fucking Cybertruck* is bound to have different opinions than a normal person. The Cybertruck is the perfect metaphor for a retarded concept that took more than twice as long to come to market as originally promised, costing twice as much, and doing half the shit he promised half as well as he promised. Who in his right mind would think he has any business gauging how much funding is necessary for cancer research? He chose swaybars smaller than those on a Toyota Corolla for a hulking 4WD. It's been recalled what, like 8 times so far? Jesus fucknut. Pick a new moron to cheerlead for.

      1. Junkmailfolder   2 months ago

        Such a strange take.

        Unelected bureaucrats make spending decisions all the time. And if the Executive branch cannot make decisions about hiring or firing federal employees, who can? Does the Legislative branch have that authority? If so, what exactly is the purpose of the Executive branch if not to execute the laws, including running the fed gov?

        And your spittle-laced rant about Musk is even stranger. The guy has been intimately and directly involved in some of the most amazing American companies ever. Tesla went from not having a car on the road to being one of the most valuable car companies in the world in the space of 10 years or so. And before you "muh subsdoodies," those same subsidies were available to legacy car manufacturers who had innumerable advantages over a startup.
        I get it--he's a Nazi or something. But there's a huge gap between cheerleading him and completely ignoring his pretty amazing successes, and you're on one extreme and I don't see anyone on this forum anywhere near the other extreme.

  4. Rick James   2 months ago

    University of Washington was attacked today by a violent mob doing approximately $1,000,000 in damage. Top story in the newspaper: Trannies.

    No statement from the Mayor, no statement from the governor. UW said they're committed to a safe and inclusive learning environment.

  5. Bipedal Humanoid   2 months ago

    JS;dr

    1. Vernon Depner   2 months ago

      JS;dr

  6. GroundTruth   2 months ago

    The problem with the budget is three things: social security, medicare and medicaid. Everything else is just noise. Until the congress and the president decide to get serious about those, the rest is just rearranging the deck chairs on the Titanic. Reform those programs so that they are a true safety net for the very poorest among us and the problems go away.

    1. Social Justice is neither   2 months ago

      Debt, the debt is also huge and short term unfixable in any positive fashion.

    2. Roberta   2 months ago

      SS cannot be reformed in that way, and it was designed to be all-or-nothing politically. The only reason it's ever had enough support to be maintained is the likelihood that your FICA tax will pay off in benefits at retirement. If it were recast as "...if you need it", it would go away entirely.

    3. Mother's Lament - (Sarcasian Meanister of Foreign Affairs)   2 months ago

      Everything else is just noise.

      That noise is hundreds of billions of dollars.

      1. charliehall   2 months ago

        You could zero out the entire rest of the federal government -- no weather service, no medical research, no immigration and customs enforcement, no passports anymore, no federal courts -- and you still have a big budget deficit if you haven't cut National Defense, Social Security, Medicare, or Medicaid.

    4. Zeb   2 months ago

      The discretionary budget could be cut enough to kill the deficit. Seems like a good place to start if entitlements are politically impossible to address.

      1. RickAbrams   2 months ago

        Not only the government but the nation would cease to function if all discretionary spending were cut. It would make the Crash of 1929 look like minor hiccup.

        1. Sevo, 5-30-24, embarrassment   2 months ago

          You.
          Are.
          A.
          Lying.
          Pile.
          Of.
          Lefty.
          Shit.

    5. charliehall   2 months ago

      National Defense and Interest on the National Debt are big problems, too, so there are actually five things. Trump wants to massively INCREASE defense spending, and his insistence on massive budget deficits as far as the eye can see means that interest on the national debt will likely to continue to be high.

    6. Lester75   2 months ago

      You forgot Pentagon waste and boondoggle projects. It's there too.

    7. Freethinksman   2 months ago

      You forgot debt service and the military. By giving Ukraine our "old" weaponry, the tiny country has been able do hold off what was supposedly the 3rd most powerful army in the world. We're throwing an F-18 off a carrier weekly, and Trump wants to give Drunkle Pete a fucking Trillion (with a T) dollars to do more nonsensical bullfuck. Why doesn't he maybe give him a couple hundred bucks and send to day drink at a strip club instead?

      The biggest mistake people are making in trying to judge whether DOGE has been effective in reining in waste fraud and abuse is treating the dismantling of the federal government (except for the military, of course) as though a reduction in spending was ever the case. Trump is throwing himself a fucking birthday parade a la Kim Jung Un. Waste, fraud and abuse was *never* the point. Claiming that is merely a distraction to get people on forums like this to bitch about how ineffective it has been when the reality is that as long as it helps Trump tighten his grip on the throat of the country it is an unmitigated success.

      1. GroundTruth   2 months ago

        Military is a primary function of the national government, and service our debt is absolutely necessary if we are to maintain our international leadership (hegemony, even). Yes, these are problems, but not in the sense that social security, medicare and medicaid are; those are unforced errors, whereas military and debt service are just facts of life.

  7. Quo Usque Tandem   2 months ago

    "...hard choices and congressional action."

    We will have to be at the very precipice of, if not over, the cliff before anything like that happens. Until then it will be business as usual and deficit funding all the way; that and the fiction that somehow MMT will make this all just go away.

  8. sarcasmic   2 months ago

    Congressional action? You mean Trump's word is not law? Well that's going to have to change.

    1. Mother's Lament - (Sarcasian Meanister of Foreign Affairs)   2 months ago

      I remember you defending Biden for signing hundreds of EOs. What changed?

      Oh, right.

      1. Bipedal Humanoid   2 months ago

        That's (D) ifferent.

  9. Mother's Lament - (Sarcasian Meanister of Foreign Affairs)   2 months ago

    What a surprise, the foreign aid official who was celebrated for bravely refusing Trump’s appointee as chairman of the board and DOGEs access to his agency’s financial records was taking kickbacks.

    Foreign Aid Official Who Resisted DOGE Took Secret Payments After Steering Africa Money To Friend

    1. DesigNate   2 months ago

      I’m shocked, shocked! At this turn of events.

  10. Use the Schwartz   2 months ago

    Aw, did DOGE do it wrong?

    Take your soma, buy yourself something nice off Amazon, and it'll aaaaalllllllll be okay.

    1. jack murphy   2 months ago

      ...and may the schwartz be with you

  11. TJJ2000   2 months ago

    Reason last month!
    DOGE is UN-Constitutional!
    DOGE can't cut that!
    DOGE shouldn't exist!

    Reason Now .... DOGE should've said it would be too hard.

    Wow. Talk about blaming the victim.

  12. Truthteller1   2 months ago

    Couple hundred billion? Pfft, not worth the effort. GFY Sullum, you regime cock smoker.

  13. MWAocdoc   2 months ago

    Big surprise: Musk was never serious about eliminating over sixty percent of discretionary spending. Just another example of educated idiots in positions of power with no visible means of support. More proof that being in charge of a large organization does not guarantee the existence of competence. All of things most worth doing in this world are really hard, but getting Congress to cut the size and authority and scope of the Federal government is IMPOSSIBLE. If Musk and Trump had actually meant business, they would have slashed the workforce of ALL of the unconstitutional Departments, refused to enforce ANY of the unconstitutional regulations or spend any of the unconstitutional spending, then stepped back and let the courts eventually deal with the fait accompli if and when. Then refuse to comply with any Court orders and see how many enforcers would side with the courts and how many would side with the Constitution. Yes, that would mean a Constitutional crisis, but nothing less will save us from catastrophe at this point in history.

    1. charliehall   2 months ago

      Most of the regulations that have been approved through the process associated with the Administrative Procedure Act are clearly constitutional.

    2. RickAbrams   2 months ago

      The crisis is bogus. If Trump had done that even the GOP would have impeached him to save themselves in 2026. The on,y thing Trump has going for him in the off year 2026 elections is that the public hates teh Dem Woke DEI more than Trump. But a year from now, the impact of Trump's lunacy may be so great, that the horrid Dems will sweep into Congress.

  14. DesigNate   2 months ago

    Who was it again that sued the Nixon admin for not spending every red penny appropriated by Congress? Which, when you think about it for more than a minute, actually makes sense, especially given Congress’s proclivity for passing unconstitutional laws and the rest of the government’s proclivity for overpaying for even basic shit like paper clips.

    Personally, I think whatever is appropriated should have to be tied to the previous years revenue and the executive branch should be able to save money where they can without being obligated to spend every penny. Crazy, I know.

  15. I, Woodchipper   2 months ago

    Better to have DOGE than no DOGE

    1. RickAbrams   2 months ago

      Doge will end up costing us billions of dollars. He has cut vital programs so that the damages due to their missing will run into the hundreds of millions. The lawsuits will cost millions and mostly likely, he will loose and the funds will have to be restored. This will throw the budget out of wack. His threat to back candidates to primary them is empty as we saw in Wisconsin.

      1. Sevo, 5-30-24, embarrassment   2 months ago

        "Doge will end up costing us billions of dollars. He has cut vital programs so that the damages due to their missing will run into the hundreds of millions."

        You.
        Are.
        Full.
        Of.
        Shit.
        Fuck off and die, asshole.

  16. Winston in Wonderland   2 months ago

    Nothing more than a cynical attempt by Musk and Trump to get their hands on government data and to cow Musk's regulators into submission.

    1. Sevo, 5-30-24, embarrassment   2 months ago

      ^ Nothing more than lies from a lying pile of steaming lefty shit.

  17. jack murphy   2 months ago

    difficult. like taking on the american car industry? like launching rockets...and then catching them on the way back? like coming to this nation with little money and becoming the richest guy around? the difficulty comes from the endless army of hogs with their noses in the taxpayer trough seeking to avoid their gravy train being put on a siding

    1. Lester75   2 months ago

      Musk's parents were upper middle class. He was never at risk of poverty in the U.S.A. He started a company called Zip2, sold it and made good business decisions building up cash to buy other businesses.

  18. RickAbrams   2 months ago

    The only thing Musk accomplished was to make himself the most hated person in America. People don't try to burn down Trumps' businesses.

    1. jabbermule   2 months ago

      No, the disinformation campaign being waged against Musk by the very people who stand to lose the most by cutting these fucking corrupt, wasteful government programs is causing useful idiots like you to hate him simply because you're easily brainwashed.

      1. jack murphy   2 months ago

        what he said!

  19. jabbermule   2 months ago

    Hey Sullum, it's proving to be a lot harder than anyone anticipated because of the ongoing disinformation campaign being waged by the very people who stand to lose the most by cutting these fucking corrupt, wasteful government programs. Do you ever think before you start typing, or are you just a shill for the corrupt globalist elite?

  20. Taito7   2 months ago

    1. it was more about forcing the agencies investigating and holding Musk's companies responsible for harming the public accountable to drop their investigations than cost cutting. Musk and Trump both have teams of accountants and lawyers who help them avoid paying a tax rate anywhere near where you'd think it is. 2. It takes a real group of idiots to cut 283K jobs in the first quarter and spend 140 billion more dollars and run a deficit that was $45 billion more than 2024. Federal employees only make up 5% of the total federal budget, so trying to get savings like that was always asinine, it was just a way to fire people who could hold them accountable.

    1. Sevo, 5-30-24, embarrassment   2 months ago

      Fuck off and die, slaver.

  21. Brian DuBridge   2 months ago

    If a common citizen who regularly makes less than $30,000 was appointed to every department head, savings would ensue, rapidly!

  22. Sevo, 5-30-24, embarrassment   2 months ago

    "Elon Musk Discovers That Serious Spending Cuts Are 'Really Difficult'"

    And the swamp-dwelling slimy pile of TDS-addled shit Sullum is creaming his jeans; the gravy train might still stay on track!
    Fuck off and die, asshole.

  23. Uomo Del Ghiaccio   2 months ago

    DOGE is a good idea or promoting the elimination of waste, fraud and abuse that was a rebranding of Obama's initiative that was far less effective than Doge has been.

    What we have learned is that the "Swamp" is far more invasive and had far more minions who are intent on hiding and retaining their piece of the waste, fraud and abuse pie.

    The other "Intentional" error that the media makes if pretending the DOGE is actually cutting or eliminating anything. The fact is that DOGE is only in an advisory role that helps to expose waste, fraud and abuse, and proposes cuts or eliminations however the actual cutting and eliminations are being done by executive authority and not DOGE.

    One can argue that the legislative branch should make these cuts and eliminations, however if you are honest, you are well aware that that this is a pipe-dream as the legislative branch can't even agree on a budget that breaks the bank let alone a balanced budget.

    The reality is that it is not reasonable to assume that we as a nation can sustain the levels of waste, fraud and abuse or the ever increasing amount of debt without a high percentage of risk of failure from federal government bloat.

    While I skeptical of Trump, he is at least talking about cuts half of the time even though he fails when he props up defense spending to the tune of a trillion dollars to the pentagon who are in serious need of an extensive audit to expose the wanton waste, fraud and abuse.

    Lastly the media makes another "Intentional" error pretending that Elon Musk is tiring of DOGE, when in reality he has been time limited from the very beginning as a special "employee" which he was so he didn't need to divest all his stocks. Elon Musk's role was to add the spark to get DOGE rolling, to start exposing the waste, fraud and abuse and the media knows this even if the media lacks the honesty or ethical behavior to admit it.

    1. NCMB   2 months ago

      I’ve listened to politicians and elected officials claim they will reduce waste, fraud and abuse and go through the federal budget “line-by-line” to reduce duplicate spending for over 40 years. Still waiting.

      Any attempt to actually cut spending (not simply reduce the rate of increase in spending) will be had only with the adoption of zero-based budgeting and a complete overhaul/simplification of the US Tax code which is so complex there is no one who fully understands it. Unfortunately, the likelihood of either of those things happening is the same as the promises mentioned above.

  24. BioBehavioral_View   2 months ago

    Context

    These United States began as a patriarchal, democratic republic based upon individualism. No longer! This declining nation now on fire has devolved into a matriarchal, republican democracy based upon collectivism. Government becoming one big teat promoting a destructive form of so-called humanitarianism is a formula for disaster as Mr. Musk and the rest of us now are witnessing.

    https://www.nationonfire.com/matriarchy-patriarchy/ .

    There never has been a successful matriarchy of any consequence. In a matriarchal, republican democracy based upon collectivism, once you give, you will find it difficult to stop giving. The parasites at the teat vote; they steal other people's wealth via the balloting box.

    “A democracy cannot exist as a permanent form of government. It can exist only until a majority of voters discover that they can vote themselves largess out of the public treasury.” - Alexander Tyler (1747-1813)

    When will it end? Soon. How will it end? National bankruptcy in the form of economic depression. We are in a decline described by debt, decay, defeat, degradation, deprivation, desperation, then despair. Can Mr. Musk, the appointed expert in efficiency reverse our plodding down the Path to Perdition? Not likely.

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