we don't need more data to know that we don't need a Dept of Education. Just eliminate it and block-grant the program funds to the state. We save 100% of the bureaucratic overhead. Ok. We'll need an office of a couple dozen over at the treasury to do the bookkeeping. So we save 99% of the bureaucratic overhead. And we have to ask serious questions about NASA's mission now that we have private sector options for space. Some of its functions could be transferred to Space Force, the rest contracted out to private sector, with NASA itself remaining as a research institute, vastly downsized. So many big picture options for saving.FLBear5630 said:A sound data based approach would go a long way to help. If there are obsolete areas, stating that and where we need to go would help with credibility. Don't just identify problems and then start the red pen, give answers and what the vision is that we are trying to attain. One thing Kennedy and Reagan did better than any other Presidents is they provided the vision of where we needed to go. The American people respond to that better than any others in the world. Tie it to the vision and how it makes the US better or wins. We are lacking that, we are just a melting pot that has diluted to mediocrity. We used to do things to be the best, now we don't know what the best is.whiterock said:Odds are, DOGE will have similar impact to Grace - not substantial. If they take too big of a bite with executive action, the courts will intervene. And they don't have the votes in congress to get it done that way.FLBear5630 said:There is no lost on this. This is opinion, you have yours and I have mine. Ad hominin add a little spark and levity to something that will not be solved until after the fact. Then, conveniently, no one remembers or talks about it.whiterock said:ya know, the ad hominem attack is usually a sign that you've lost the argument.FLBear5630 said:You are a Trump troll... It just hit me. You come off as an analytical sort, in reality you are a Trump troll. He can do no wrong... You are as bad as JillBear.whiterock said:Donors donate to get access. To both sides of the aisle........FLBear5630 said:Huh?LIB,MR BEARS said:FLBear5630 said:boognish_bear said:JUST IN: 🇺🇸 Meta CEO Mark Zuckerberg donates $1,000,000 to President-elect Trump's inaugural fund. pic.twitter.com/GcC3PF4sp2
— Watcher.Guru (@WatcherGuru) December 12, 2024
Amazing how winning does that. Threaten with DOGE to cut out Govt contracts and subsidies, watch the money roll in to Trump.
So, do we take bets on how much actually gets cut and who it effects?
You guys don't see any potential for abuse? I am the strange one saying this doesn't smell right? Elections have consequences, in this case financial.
There is potential for abuse at virtually all levels of government.
Here's an idea, how about going after the known abuses before chasing imagined ones.
You're like the abused wife that stays in the marriage because she knows she can get groceries on a regular basis.
Zuckerberg just donated 1m to Trump. Facebook, the anti-Trump. You don't think that is interesting? That is imagined. No intent for favoritism there. Mark just saw the light? Yeah, no need to watch this set up... Let's focus on the 55k a year clerk, that is the real problem...
So why is it that only a concern when a guy donates to Trump?
How is the eminently practical observation that donors want access to both sides of the aisle a troll for anything/anyone?
The question is not why is it only bad for Trump, why is Mr. MAGA, ideolog that he is, accepting his money and influence.
Again, why is it only an outrage when Trump accepts donor money? Doesn't his willingness to work with people who've wronged him show pragmatism rather than ideological fervor?
Now Facebook is ok?
Well, it exists and it is decidedly a part of team Blue. Kicking Zuckerberg in the teeth is not going to make it any less partisan for Team Blue. Only engagement does that. And engagement is normally a sign of the pragmatist rather than ideologue.
Gonna put him on the Gold Star Panel to determine what gets funded?
Probably not. Zuck is donating as a defensive maneuver, to lessen odds his empire will be subjected to retaliatory regulation (like what happened to Musk). DOGE, as is the case on the numerous like-commissions before it, exists not to fund but to defund.
Donors give so they will have access to electeds, have private cell phone numbers of electeds, and yes, they even donate in order to be in position to threaten to withdraw the donation if they are harmed by policy.
Why does USG give foreign aid all over the world?
In no small part, it's so that we can punish bad behavior of a state by threatening to withhold our aid, or redirect it to an adversary of that state, or rewarding good behavior of that state. Pretty much the same dynamic with the donor class. They matter, too. Disproportionately so. You have to get them on board for your agenda if you want to be effective. And they do tend to be successful people who know how to be effective.......
My bet -
Musk does not lost one penny in Govt contracts and he gets rid of the oversight on his biotech implants and space flights (or tries)
Why shouldn't he make money on govt contracts?
Regulatory reform is not synonymous with "getting rid" of oversight.
Vivek loses interest when he finds out the complexity of what implementing election rhetoric really entails.
He'll leave DOGE when he gets appointed to replace Vance in the Senate.
I like teasing with you (and several others) on these arguments because you are one of the few that will do it back, but not get really pissed.
But who knows. SCOTUS has already punctured the shield of the administrative state, so DOGE might get more done than we imagine. There is considerably more public support for DOGE than for any prior effort, which means there will be a political cost to opposing it.
I agree that Kennedy and Reagan provided vision on where we needed to go. Kennedy's was almost entirely aspirational - rising to meet the Soviet challenge, going to the moon, spreading American exceptionalism around the world, etc..... Reagan had those same themes. But fiscal and regulatory reforms were high on the list, too. Reagan savaged the federal government as an over-bloated behemoth in need of drastic cuts. He appointed a noted private sector CEO Peter Grace to lead a commission of private sector businessmen to identify those cuts. That commission coined the phrase for which Trump has been so villified - "Drain the Swamp."
The vision is "Drain the Swamp." It has been presented to the American people. They voted for it. They deserve to see at least some of it get done.