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Show HN: I built a free UCP checker – see if AI agents can find your store

https://ucphub.ai/ucp-store-check/
1•vladeta•3m ago•1 comments

Show HN: SVGV – A Real-Time Vector Video Format for Budget Hardware

https://github.com/thealidev/VectorVision-SVGV
1•thealidev•5m ago•0 comments

Study of 150 developers shows AI generated code no harder to maintain long term

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=b9EbCb5A408
1•lifeisstillgood•5m ago•0 comments

Spotify now requires premium accounts for developer mode API access

https://www.neowin.net/news/spotify-now-requires-premium-accounts-for-developer-mode-api-access/
1•bundie•8m ago•0 comments

When Albert Einstein Moved to Princeton

https://twitter.com/Math_files/status/2020017485815456224
1•keepamovin•10m ago•0 comments

Agents.md as a Dark Signal

https://joshmock.com/post/2026-agents-md-as-a-dark-signal/
1•birdculture•11m ago•0 comments

System time, clocks, and their syncing in macOS

https://eclecticlight.co/2025/05/21/system-time-clocks-and-their-syncing-in-macos/
1•fanf2•13m ago•0 comments

McCLIM and 7GUIs – Part 1: The Counter

https://turtleware.eu/posts/McCLIM-and-7GUIs---Part-1-The-Counter.html
1•ramenbytes•15m ago•0 comments

So whats the next word, then? Almost-no-math intro to transformer models

https://matthias-kainer.de/blog/posts/so-whats-the-next-word-then-/
1•oesimania•17m ago•0 comments

Ed Zitron: The Hater's Guide to Microsoft

https://bsky.app/profile/edzitron.com/post/3me7ibeym2c2n
2•vintagedave•20m ago•1 comments

UK infants ill after drinking contaminated baby formula of Nestle and Danone

https://www.bbc.com/news/articles/c931rxnwn3lo
1•__natty__•20m ago•0 comments

Show HN: Android-based audio player for seniors – Homer Audio Player

https://homeraudioplayer.app
2•cinusek•21m ago•0 comments

Starter Template for Ory Kratos

https://github.com/Samuelk0nrad/docker-ory
1•samuel_0xK•22m ago•0 comments

LLMs are powerful, but enterprises are deterministic by nature

2•prateekdalal•26m ago•0 comments

Make your iPad 3 a touchscreen for your computer

https://github.com/lemonjesus/ipad-touch-screen
2•0y•31m ago•1 comments

Internationalization and Localization in the Age of Agents

https://myblog.ru/internationalization-and-localization-in-the-age-of-agents
1•xenator•31m ago•0 comments

Building a Custom Clawdbot Workflow to Automate Website Creation

https://seedance2api.org/
1•pekingzcc•34m ago•1 comments

Why the "Taiwan Dome" won't survive a Chinese attack

https://www.lowyinstitute.org/the-interpreter/why-taiwan-dome-won-t-survive-chinese-attack
2•ryan_j_naughton•34m ago•0 comments

Xkcd: Game AIs

https://xkcd.com/1002/
1•ravenical•36m ago•0 comments

Windows 11 is finally killing off legacy printer drivers in 2026

https://www.windowscentral.com/microsoft/windows-11/windows-11-finally-pulls-the-plug-on-legacy-p...
1•ValdikSS•36m ago•0 comments

From Offloading to Engagement (Study on Generative AI)

https://www.mdpi.com/2306-5729/10/11/172
1•boshomi•38m ago•1 comments

AI for People

https://justsitandgrin.im/posts/ai-for-people/
1•dive•39m ago•0 comments

Rome is studded with cannon balls (2022)

https://essenceofrome.com/rome-is-studded-with-cannon-balls
1•thomassmith65•44m ago•0 comments

8-piece tablebase development on Lichess (op1 partial)

https://lichess.org/@/Lichess/blog/op1-partial-8-piece-tablebase-available/1ptPBDpC
2•somethingp•46m ago•0 comments

US to bankroll far-right think tanks in Europe against digital laws

https://www.brusselstimes.com/1957195/us-to-fund-far-right-forces-in-europe-tbtb
3•saubeidl•47m ago•0 comments

Ask HN: Have AI companies replaced their own SaaS usage with agents?

1•tuxpenguine•50m ago•0 comments

pi-nes

https://twitter.com/thomasmustier/status/2018362041506132205
1•tosh•52m ago•0 comments

Show HN: Crew – Multi-agent orchestration tool for AI-assisted development

https://github.com/garnetliu/crew
1•gl2334•52m ago•0 comments

New hire fixed a problem so fast, their boss left to become a yoga instructor

https://www.theregister.com/2026/02/06/on_call/
1•Brajeshwar•54m ago•0 comments

Four horsemen of the AI-pocalypse line up capex bigger than Israel's GDP

https://www.theregister.com/2026/02/06/ai_capex_plans/
1•Brajeshwar•54m ago•0 comments
Open in hackernews

How did DOGE disrupt so much while saving so little?

https://www.nytimes.com/2025/12/23/us/politics/doge-musk-trump-analysis.html
332•JumpCrisscross•1mo ago

Comments

arealaccount•1mo ago
Many of the people they cut were able to negotiate a full year severance, then were hired back as contractors effectively earning double pay.
jrm4•1mo ago
Good for them.
CamelCaseName•1mo ago
Not so good for taxpayers.
ares623•1mo ago
Which is also them
IAmBroom•1mo ago
Please forward your next raise to me, since it will only raise your taxes.
georgemcbay•1mo ago
> Please forward your next raise to me, since it will only raise your taxes.

Joking aside that's not really how taxes work (in the USA anyway).

A raise might move you into a higher top marginal tax rate, but only the money you earn above that new bracket threshold gets taxed at the higher rate, everything below the threshold continues to get taxed at the same rate as before.

Raises don't increase your taxes (though you might end up with a slightly higher top tax rate solely on the new money you weren't making at all before).

exe34•1mo ago
It was never about saving money for the tax payers! They voted for this.
firesteelrain•1mo ago
It was but the system is too corrupt
chowells•1mo ago
Basically irrelevant to taxpayers. Their salaries or triple their salaries will add up to a difference of a couple dollars on the average tax bill. Doge didn't actually cut any of the big expenses. It was only intended to cut the effective things.
jrm4•1mo ago
Meh, false; the cost of the disruption will almost certainly be comparable, if not outweigh, the money paid.
boogieknite•1mo ago
consulting company i work at hired a grip of these people for construction and public land projects. struggle with guilt that our success is the result of capitalizing on incompetence and lies

we certainly charge at least 3x cost for gov to employ them on top of whatever severance they might have received. the work still needs to be done and specific people know how to do it. sort of becoming a staffing agency because theres so much profit in it. makes my stomach sick writing this out

ethbr1•1mo ago
If you're seeing that much money, imagine how much is flowing to the big preexisting staffing firms...

Almost enough to make you think that gutting then offering employees back at higher cost and pocketing part of the difference was the goal.

omnimus•1mo ago
McKinsey and other consulting firms are built on this principle. Lobby for “retiring” or deskilling people in organisation and then replace them with your own contractors once problems arise.
nineplay•1mo ago
They will also be paying somewhere around 50k a year soon for heath insurance because contractors don't get benefits. Fun!
lotsoweiners•1mo ago
I work in state government and while contractors don’t get benefits that FTEs receive, they are usually paid close to double in salary.
firesteelrain•1mo ago
That sounds like something DOGE should investigate as corrupt
iwontberude•1mo ago
We all knew this would fail. Any leader worth their salt would know massive reorganizations are failures even when they aren’t unconstitutional and worthy of the death penalty.
jrm4•1mo ago
Systematic of so much clown techbro thought; idiots only see the obvious nicks and problems -- and even occasional absurdity -- in large institutions, and think they can come in fix everything.

It's just an extension of good ol' Chesterton's fence.

InsideOutSanta•1mo ago
Perhaps because disrupting things was the actual goal, rather than saving money. DOGE was highly effective in harming the entities meant to oversee Musk's companies, stealing information about union organizing and labor complaints, reducing the government's ability to collect taxes, and destroying its regulatory capacity.
BennyGezerit•1mo ago
This is the right take
underlipton•1mo ago
There is a certain class of American that rides the knife edge between credulity and contempt in supporting and accepting the activities and intent of bad actors who pledge to get rid of the things they don't like and they people they detest. They're ever-ready to believe the barest of excuses and to hand-wave the worst excesses in this regard. Today's anti-woke are yesterday's McCarthyists, and history will note the echo.
MisterTea•1mo ago
> There is a certain class of American

The selfish kind. Unfortunately that seems to be the end goal of the American dream: "I got mine, fuck you." I can't tell you how many times I heard the "protect my family" argument from people I never thought would vote for that clown.

ido•1mo ago
Also not exclussively American. Plenty of selfish assholes where I'm at as well, I suspect this is a world-wide phenomenon.
zimpenfish•1mo ago
The UK is a good example of this over the last decade (at least.)
underlipton•1mo ago
But people do come here specifically to be selfish. They like that they can be selfish here in ways that are socialized away in other countries. They like that they can even socialize their selfishness, forcing poor people to subsidize the rich.
braebo•1mo ago
They are typically uneducated victims of the largest and most well funded mass propaganda brainwashing campaigns in the history of mankind, to be fair. Forgive them, for they know not what they do. The perpetrators of the misinformation, however, know exactly what they’re doing.
underlipton•1mo ago
I think this misrepresents the situation. Many of these people are well-educated and affluent. In fact, such efforts wouldn't be possible without the support of the wealthy and academic elite, including on the left. Stooge-of-the-month Ezra Klein is decried as a woke liberal by certain segments of the political sphere, and yet he's running interference against those who support forcing the affluent to give back some of their recent outsize gains (through his "abundance" tripe). It's not poor, rural red-staters listening to his message.
9rx•1mo ago
> Many of these people are well-educated and affluent.

That does not preclude them from being uneducated and gullible to brainwashing. In fact, there is a strong case to be made that being well-educated and affluent primes one to become more likely to be uneducated/brainwashed. When you are well-educated and affluent, the "yes men" show up and start to make you feel like you know everything, and it becomes really easy to lose the skepticism and awareness that one normally has.

> It's not poor, rural red-staters listening to his message.

Was there something to suggest that it was? I see no mention of this group anywhere.

throwrqX•1mo ago
The purpose of a system is what it does
ourmandave•1mo ago
Or maybe the unelected moronic clown running it went in with a chainsaw like when he took over twitter.

Giving zero f*cks for the massive harm caused or the legality of it.

Aeglaecia•1mo ago
I don't think hanlon's razor applies to billionaires , unless the peter principle holds true all the way to the very top
Nasrudith•1mo ago
Why wouldn't Peter Principle apply just because the magical financial threshold is crossed? This is Peter Principle in a textbook way, a promotion from managing companies to managing the government.
Aeglaecia•1mo ago
my original thesis is wrong - while musk may have petered up to the top, that doesnt imply his actions must also be attributed to stupidity. the error in the thesis is conflation of stupidity with the raw brutal strength of cancer
7bit•1mo ago
Was he ever competent in something, tho?
watersb•1mo ago
Ah. That would be the Dilbert Principle:

> Unlike the Peter principle, the promoted individuals were not particularly good at any job they previously had, so awarding them a supervisory position is a way to remove them from the productive workflow.

> An earlier formulation of this effect was known as Putt's Law (1981), credited to the pseudonymous author Archibald Putt ("Technology is dominated by two types of people, those who understand what they do not manage and those who manage what they do not understand.").

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dilbert_principle

eru•1mo ago
Well, for Twitter it's fine. It's a private company, and the shareholders can only blame themselves for the management they put in charge.

(From a broader society point of view, I'm a bit sad that they didn't actually manage to run Twitter into the ground. I think Twitter's a net-negative for humanity. But that's a different topic. People obviously like using it.)

leosanchez•1mo ago
Not just Twitter almost all of social media apps are net negative for humanity.
theoreticalmal•1mo ago
Except Hacker News :)
saulpw•1mo ago
The things that make social media net-negative--advertising, infinite scroll, global scale--aren't part of HN. Facebook wasn't net-negative when it was just a website that a few million people used to post semi-publicly with their community.
rationalist•1mo ago
Don't forget "personalized" feed/home.
etempleton•1mo ago
Once content begins being served by algorithm social networks start taking a nose dive in terms of quality and user experience and they slowly spiral into lowest common denominator smut. It juices engagement and therefore advertising dollars for a time, but slowly half of users start to recognize the vapidness of it all and disengage for good.
eru•1mo ago
Hacker News is paginated, but effectively infinite, too. Though I guess that's enough of a UI friction to make a difference?

How is it not global scale? Or do you mean it only target a specific slice of your life (even if it makes not much of a difference where on the globe you are)?

walljm•1mo ago
yes. precisely.
pardon_me•1mo ago
Social control media.
UltraSane•1mo ago
Musk is uniquely stupid and arrogant for refusing to understand very complex systems before making radical changes to them. This behavior directly led to outages at Twitter after he bought it.
pennomi•1mo ago
If only that truly was a unique trait…
etempleton•1mo ago
I do think Musk correctly identified excess staff and irresponsible spending, but where he screwed up was being his toxic self which drove away even more of the audience and almost every big advertiser.
UltraSane•1mo ago
Musk fired people before understanding what they did at Twitter. The best example is how he fired a Twitter employee who criticized him but it turned out to be the owner of a company Twitter bought and he had enormous legal protection and when Musk found this out he was suddenly much nicer to him.
firesteelrain•1mo ago
And Twitter is running fine without all the excess staff
etempleton•1mo ago
I mean, I don’t think it makes money and it is a cesspool of misinformation, hate, porn, and bots, but technically, it is fine.
firesteelrain•1mo ago
It has had revenue declines and moderation problems, but it is still operating at internet scale, serving hundreds of millions of users, generating billions in annual revenue, and remaining technically stable. That’s not ‘fine,’ but it’s also not a failed or non-functional system.
etempleton•1mo ago
It was staffed with walking examples of the Dunning-Kruger effect. People who knew very little about the departments or the work that they were cutting but enough to assume they knew more than people who had spent their life working there. That requires a special level of arrogance. They went in with the idea that all of these people at this organization are lazy and stupid and so everything they didn’t understand must be a result of one of those things or the other.
saltcured•1mo ago
This is disturbing.

They actually had competence at something..?

jauntywundrkind•1mo ago
Disregarding the state, all data protection rules, and running amock; yes they are competent maligners.
thisisit•1mo ago
I like how in today’s world and especially when it comes to Musk things cannot be as simple as incompetence. It has to be some 4D chess move. Like a reverse Hanlon’s razor: Never attribute to stupidity that which might be/maybe/perhaps explained by 4D chess move. It’s like 4chan leaking all over the Internet. And Musk can keep his genius legacy alive.
The_Stone•1mo ago
is it really 4D chess to imagine that a man under investigation by the federal government would desire to benefit from being given express permission to reduce force and efficacy of agencies directly threatening him?

I don't think Musk having bad faith intent shows him to be intelligent, more just greedy and selfish, but I think it's actually more irresponsible to believe that he had absolutely no idea what he was doing

pfannkuchen•1mo ago
Under investigation for what? Like the self driving claims thing or something nefarious?
__s•1mo ago
https://www.theguardian.com/technology/2025/apr/28/elon-musk...

False claims of self driving is half of it, at 1B

pfannkuchen•1mo ago
That falls under “dishonest stuff companies do all the time”. Unless there are major political points to be scored by nailing him (which there may be now, don’t get me wrong), this would get a slap on the wrist. The cars do drive themselves, they have for awhile, Tesla never claimed it was perfect, they only claimed it would be perfect in the near future and musk plausibly could have (delusionally) thought this so there is no case (not saying he isn’t dishonest, though, that’s just not how the legal system works).

So I don’t think being looked at for the kind of stuff many companies do all the time explains <checks notes> infiltrating the government and personally disrupting the people investigating him, in public. If he’s worried about a financial hit, souring Tesla’s reputation as he has is obviously not worth it. If he’s worried about prosecution, surely he would be better off being nice to everyone in politics, not pissing anyone off and strongly supporting choice causes off the mainstream radar that happen to be in the interest of politicians.

So if he is doing it on principle, he just needs to be hubristic and reckless and possibly very autistic. If he is doing it to mess with the people investigating him, he needs to be outright stupid.

Hubristic and reckless (and autistic) are much, much more realistic adjectives for Musk than “outright stupid”. I know a lot of people will just assert that he is stupid, but if you yourself are sufficiently intelligent and you listen to the guy talk for a long time, you can at least tell he isn’t stupid. You can tell because he doesn’t do the rhetorical things stupid people need to do in order to mask contradictions or logical holes in what they are saying. They always do it. Even smart people sometimes do it quite a bit, like Steven Pinker for example m. Musk very rarely does it, and when he does it’s so completely obvious you can tell he’s bad at it and didn’t get where he is by being good at it.

cam_l•1mo ago
Just because he is playing 4d chess, doesn't mean he is good at it.

Hanlon's razor is wrong to suggest an either or scenario when it is just as often some mix of stupidity and malice.

ChromaticPanic•1mo ago
Never attribute to blatant corruption, "4D chess move" . There isn't anything sneaky or smart about what Elon pulled here.
InsideOutSanta•1mo ago
It's not 4D chess to hurt the agencies that regulate and investigate you. It's the opposite of 4D chess. There is no secret plan, not conspiracy theory, no clever chess move.
jakobnissen•1mo ago
I don't think that's right - although of course we are speculating about what's happening inside the head of Musk.

Musk strikes me as an juvenile and naive man, precisely the kind of man that would take a hatchet to a complex system while believing he is competently reforming. His experience with taking over Twitter probably reinforced his belief that you can move fast and break organisations and, despite all the moaning from liberals, nothing bad will happen in the end.

So Musk is exactly the man to honestly believe in what he was doing, and he was immersed in a right wing echo chamber, which for 50 years has been talking about government waste.

Don't ascribe to malevolence what can be explained by incompetence.

fakedang•1mo ago
You underestimate Musk too much.

This was years in the making. He basically made a $200 million bet on the USG, one that translated into hundreds of billions. This was all calculated, and the veneer of government inefficiency was good enough to mask his actual objectives.

I can say this confidently because that's what I would have done too, and I'm not half as smart as him (given that I haven't built a Paypal or a SpaceX myself). That's what anyone in such a privileged position would have done. The upside to doing it that way was just that much massive.

braebo•1mo ago
> That's what anyone in such a privileged position would have done.

That’s what anyone who’s self-centered and morally bankrupt enough would do perhaps, but no, not “anyone”. Some people are committed to being good (or at least striving towards it).

Your take strikes me as sociopathic at worst, and misguided at best. Much like musk, to your point.

margalabargala•1mo ago
On the other hand, getting into "such a privileged position" of hundreds of billions has the sociopathy you mention as a prerequisite...
conartist6•1mo ago
Smart doesn't work like that. I have little doubt that you are as "smart" as Elon.

Usually what people mean when they say "smart" is actually more like meaning of the word "canny," which helps explain the distinction. A canny decision is one that makes you look smart in retrospect.

To put it another way, I might climb to the top of a hill. Climbing the hill doesn't make me taller, but it does get me the benefits of being able to see everything for miles around.

Perhaps after climbing a hill/Ent I see Saruman's army marching off to war, and realize that even though I may be a halfling, right now I could say a particular thing that would be "as the falling of small stones that starts an avalanche in the mountains." This is a canny moment, and like any canny moment or is filled with surreal possibility. But it isn't because Meriadoc is a tall hobbit and, not because only a tall person could do this thing that involves seeing a great distance.

UltraSane•1mo ago
Musk didn't build PayPal or spacex
firesteelrain•1mo ago
What do you mean? SpaceX in particular he still owns
UltraSane•1mo ago
Musk knows nothing about rocket design and has very little to do with SpaceX, which is a big reason it is actually successful. If Musk actually TRIED to design a rocket it would go about as well as the CyberTruck because he would just ignore all advice from anyone who actually know how to design rockets.
firesteelrain•1mo ago
He didn’t personally design rockets, but he founded SpaceX, funded it, set the architecture, and has been deeply involved in major technical decisions. That’s not ‘nothing,’ and it’s hard to explain SpaceX’s success without him.
trueismywork•1mo ago
He did so the hyperloop just to stall trains. So there is precedent.
spaceman_2020•1mo ago
The idea that he is “stupid” or “naive” while also being the world’s wealthiest man by far needs to die

What he really is is a sociopath who uses the idea of “doing good” to infiltrate systems and setup laws and legal structures that benefit him and his companies

I don’t buy any of the goody-two-shoes “for the sake of humanity” persona and neither should you. But the worst thing you can do is dismiss his sociopathy as naivete or stupidity

UltraSane•1mo ago
His behavior after buying Twitter really is stupid though.
spaceman_2020•1mo ago
Maybe the point of buying Twitter was to help elect Trump and get his fingers into the administration

His net worth figure certainly seems to indicate that it wasn’t stupid

SpicyLemonZest•1mo ago
Is it? Chaotic, certainly. But if you proposed in 2021 that there was a way to:

* make white nationalism acceptable on Twitter

* while increasing the US government's dependence on it

* at the same time that the US president owns a competing social media app

I think nearly anyone would have told you that's impossible. Strategic chaos in service of a bad goal just looks stupid from a distance.

spaceman_2020•1mo ago
I really think his entire Twitter purchase was a way to get political leverage

Musk is thinking far down the line

meheleventyone•1mo ago
He did try to get out of buying it which everyone seems to have memoryholed. I doubt anything other than way too much ketamine is behind a lot of the chaotic decision making.
UltraSane•1mo ago
I meant the way he fired AND INSULTED all the smart people whore created the Twitter back end
SpicyLemonZest•1mo ago
Again, though, do you think that there’s some concrete goal he was aiming for which he could have achieved if only he hadn’t fired and insulted them? Or do you just think that it was terribly rude and they didn’t deserve to be treated that way? I wouldn’t call the latter stupidity, especially since he was working against contemporaneous predictions that the site wouldn’t be able to function without those people.
UltraSane•1mo ago
It is stupid because people are going to want a asshole premium to work at Twitter after seeing how badly Musk treated people.
mrguyorama•1mo ago
When you are in charge of US government reform, incompetence IS malice.

You don't get to claim incompetence while being one of the richest people alive.

brnt•1mo ago
> Perhaps because disrupting things was the actual goal

It surprises me if anyone thought anything different. I mean, how could you think anything else if yo know what group of cronies there people are?

It's like Americans forgot all about what was wrong with the Rockefeller-era oligarchy. Even the MAGA slogan is just a copy from back then.

browningstreet•1mo ago
Elon's still pumping his DOGE work and the Cybertruck daily on his X account.
UltraSane•1mo ago
[flagged]
cma•1mo ago
Cybertruck may have a big customer with $100million+ orders, wouldn't count them out:

https://futurism.com/advanced-transport/spacex-buying-unfath...

Big NASA money involved like the earlier bonds the same company bought from SolarCity.

NuclearPM•1mo ago
Less than 2000 trucks is 100 million dollars? And even then, this is meaningless for a Ponzi scheme “worth” $1.5 trillion.

0.0067%

Do you still think your claim makes sense?

margalabargala•1mo ago
It's not meaningless, because the stock price is based on vibes.

Losing a big CT sale is bad vibes. If the finances don't matter on the way up, why would they matter on the way down?

cma•1mo ago
They said they only sold around 5000 of the trucks in the quarter. Was only responding to the stuff about Cybertruck. It seems like a material portion of its sales are to his own other company.
grugagag•1mo ago
I really wonder how Musk will fare when the tides turn because they eventually will
margalabargala•1mo ago
They've already turned, and turned back, since he left DOGE.
jimmydoe•1mo ago
the goal is to keep attention.

maybe disrupting things badly is more preferable as that gets more attention, but ultimately the impact is good or bad doesn't matter at all.

bigbadfeline•1mo ago
> the goal is to keep attention.

A strong claim is severely weakened by lack of evidence. In this case, all evidence points to the claim being untrue.

> but ultimately the impact is good or bad doesn't matter at all.

That's essentially a rewording of the above claim and again without evidence.

In fact, it's detrimental for the perpetrators of disruptive actions to attract attention to them/selves when these actions don't achieve their purported benefits.

If they wanted only to simulate activity, they'd have used less damaging to themselves ways to achieve it without inflicting damage to the system. The latter is so important that it excludes accidental or PR-related actions to that end.

epistasis•1mo ago
I remember people citing the All-In podcast about "you can always cut 10% without affecting things negatively" or something silly like that. Or thinking that $1T/year of cuts is something that's possible without taking out social security and medicare and tons of defense spending.

I can not tell you how much respect I have lost for anybody involved with the All-In podcast. They sold out all credibility for political wins for wanna-be fascists.

These jokers all got lucky, obviously. They can not perform basic analysis of organizations, clearly. What a joke of a result!

thwarted•1mo ago
PJ O'Rourke had a line in his book "Parliament of Whores" when he, as a layman, ham-fistedly cuts a bunch of stuff from the federal budget, and then just subtracts 10% from it at the end. Probably not the originator, but a quote I think about often.

"Add it all together, and I've cut $282.8 billion, leaving a federal budget of $950.5 billion, to which I apply O'Rourke's Circumcision Precept: You can take 10 percent off the top of anything. This gives me another $95 billion in cuts for a grand total of $337.8 billion in budget liposuction."

Parliament of Whores, page 103.

epistasis•1mo ago
I have never worked for the government, but have worked in industry that deals with government employees. One thing that is very different in industry than in government budgets is that industry budgets do have that 10% of waste. But the budgets of all government orgs I have seen are incredibly lean, especially on the salary side. The government gets mission-driven folks that are willing to give up income in order to accomplish the things they want in the world. I saw this most clearly at CDC, all the scientists I interacted with could double their salary over night by going to private industry, but they stayed where they were because they were more interested in doing meaningful and impactful work. And when it came to the budgets that CDC used to accomplish scientific work, they were even more frugal and effective than the most penny-pinching academic labs I saw. Industry is awash in waste in comparison to how effective the dollars were that were spent at CDC.

And the CDC work is all pre-competitive work that boosts the efficacy of everything else in the economy. A tiny amount of money that results in so much more economic activity and savings than could be imagined in most private industry. And all the numbers for the public savings on, say, food safety are all clearly laid out in long reports. Reports that nobody at DOGE would ever read because they don't believe than anything good could be produced by people who accept lower salaries for higher impact.

piva00•1mo ago
I've seen private companies cutting down on logging expenses that would completely fund my friend's whole research department at Stockholm's University.

There's absurd waste in private companies which always makes me laugh when people say the government is inefficient.

saberience•1mo ago
Government IS inefficient though, and it's inefficient because there is zero competition and also complete job security. It's also inefficient because the employees are generally bottom of the barrel folks due to the incredibly poor wages.

So you can get people working in the government who couldn't get a job in the private sector if they tried, working with total job security (they can't get fired) for an entity with zero competition so there is no drive or motivation to get better or otherwise improve.

Whereas with private companies you can get hired quickly and fired quickly, meaning you have to perform well (motivation), you are paid better so you attract higher quality candidates, and also if the company does badly you go bankrupt, which means the whole company performs better or dies. The companies which remain win the market and are more efficient (as they are the companies which survived).

piva00•1mo ago
That's a very US-centric viewpoint though, it doesn't apply to every government or society.

If the US government is more inefficient than others then there's something to be said about how it works, how it could be improved, instead there's only this rhetoric that doesn't invite at all the discussion about what are its failures and paths to improve, just recycled catchphrases supported by a cliché.

Private companies are also inefficient in many ways even with competition, why is that if competition is supposed to make inefficient companies uncompetitive? Maybe there's something else to discuss rather than these thought-terminating clichés...

NeutralCrane•1mo ago
This is the fairy tale as it’s often told. Doesn’t match up with my experience. The incompetence and waste in private organizations is staggering. The free market efficiency and competency of the free market is greatly overstated.
arunabha•1mo ago
The GP made an assertion and cited some evidence(even if anecdotal). Do you have any evidence for your claims?
IAmBroom•1mo ago
Yes, certain government agencies appeal to professionals as vocations rather than jobs. I have a friend who joined the FBI straight out of college. They don't EVER chat about their job, but I GUARANTEE you a private-industry offer at a significant bump in pay wouldn't make them flinch.

CDC? Every day you go home believing that you are part of a machine saving thousands of lives. BATF? Keeping guns away from terrorists.

And it's not a self-delusion. They ARE doing good things, even if the agency isn't perfect.

thwarted•1mo ago
My understanding of what you say is true, and NASA is a common example of high value cultural and economic outcomes for the pittance the US government budgets/allocates for it.

O'Rourke's take is an interesting read; it is commentary that is meant to be more humorous and entertaining than political, I think he excelled at that in the entirety of Parliament of Whores. It was published in 1991 in a different political climate. He does admit he's doing this for fun, that the takes he express are mostly uninformed about the nature of many of these government departments and programs, and takes a (traditional) conservative (high level, and ahem, naive) view of many government programs. For example, additional quotes from that PoW chapter:

> Training and employment is properly the concern of trainees and employers: $5.7 billion.

> Insurance companies should gladly pay for consumer and occupational health and safety: $1.5 billion.

> If unemployment insurance is really insurance, it ought to at least break even: $18.6 billion.

I shared this for the Circumcision Precept bit; the portions of the quote surrounding that were context.

mjd•1mo ago
O'Rourke also said “The Republicans are the party that says that government doesn't work and then they get elected and prove it,” which I've thought about a lot this year.
thdrtol•1mo ago
We all fall into this trap, thinking we can do better than others.

The problem is that Elon Musk has power (in the form of money) and was able to buy his way into the government.

Elon Musk is a smart salesman but that's about it. He has little deep knowledge in a lot of what he does.

kelseyfrog•1mo ago
> Elon Musk is a smart salesman but that's about it.

How is it that most people here can see through it, but people in power can't?

glitchc•1mo ago
The way most of our governments are set up, the people in power typically arrive on the backs of the people with money. Elon Musk has a great deal of wealth, so everyone in power is going to listen to him.
JumpCrisscross•1mo ago
> but people in power can't?

Why do you presume they can’t? Musk failed phenomenally to sell DOGE to the public, the President or the Congress. The expectation was that he’d have been better at that.

kelseyfrog•1mo ago
Can you tell me more? I was already familiar with The Butterfly Revolution and RAGE before the inauguration, but it sounds like most people weren't?
queenkjuul•1mo ago
Money and power are all that matters. Musk is a dipshit but he's a rich and powerful dipshit and that's all that matters
epistasis•1mo ago
Power respects power, ultimately. If you have wealth and power, those in power assume it was earned, because otherwise it's admitting that their own power could be through luck.

I will say that there are a few billionaires out there that do not get respect because everybody else assumes they "got lucky," but it's certainly not many billionaires. And those that people assume "got lucky" have mostly had terrible PR management on their way up, and not bothered to try to clean up their image. I have taken investment from one such billionaire that people would tell me "he got lucky," and though I don't think he got lucky to make his billions, he was also really terrible in his judgement and could not make the switch to investing even in similar industries successfully.

neko_ranger•1mo ago
"Why do companies hire consultancies?"
IAmBroom•1mo ago
Because they don't have a permanent need to hire the expertise.

Very different idea.

morgan814•1mo ago
> We all fall into this trap, thinking we can do better than others.

It took me a while to learn this lesson about complex systems.

First week at a new job? It’s easy to identify all the ways things are done wrong. Six months later you begin to understand why they were done “wrong”.

ethbr1•1mo ago
> First week at a new job? It’s easy to identify all the ways things are done wrong. Six months later you begin to understand why they were done “wrong”.

https://theknowledge.io/chestertons-fence-explained/

therealdrag0•1mo ago
Or often: 6 months you realize how hard/expensive it is to correct even if it is wrong.
zimpenfish•1mo ago
Or: you realise that it was the pet project of someone who is now in charge and no matter how wrong/broken/costly it is, there will never be political will to allow change until they're gone.
zajio1am•1mo ago
> Six months later you begin to understand why they were done “wrong”.

It is hard to say whether it is really understanding, or just stockholm syndrome of local optimum.

davkan•1mo ago
> We all fall into this trap, thinking we can do better than others.

I do not think we all have the level of hubris required to shit all over large governmental organizations as Musk did. I think maybe even the majority of people would say woah hold up let’s take look at what’s going on before tearing it down.

And of course that’s under the charitable assumption his actions weren’t malicious.

perilunar•1mo ago
> Elon Musk is a smart salesman but that's about it. He has little deep knowledge in a lot of what he does.

No, I think it's the opposite — he's extremely knowledgeable about engineering and science [1], but quite hopeless at social things. If he was ignorant of technical stuff then SpaceX and Tesla would not have succeeded, and conversely if he was a good salesman he would have foreseen how badly his political actions would hurt Twitter and Tesla.

It's quite foolish to think someone is stupid or ignorant just because you don't agree with their politics.

1. see these quotes: https://x.com/yatharthmaan/status/2001313180644266478

fzeroracer•1mo ago
He's been on public twitter calls before and his engineering knowledge is pathetic. I'm sorry but he's not knowledgeable about engineering or science, he's marketable about those things. People conflate the two often, but one will fall apart like a jenga tower the moment you push it even a little.

And a bunch of out of context quotes from folks that are either buddies with him or don't know shit is not convincing.

josefritzishere•1mo ago
The intent was never savings. Hackers and Accountants are completely different specialties. If you send in hackers, the intent is obviously to hack, not conduct forensic accounting. (The inverse would also be true of course)
aaa_aaa•1mo ago
Because "government efficiency" is an oxymoron?
inejge•1mo ago
Because there wasn't that much to save, compared to the sheer size of the budget? Because it's much easier to destroy than to build, generally? Because it's always been more of an ideological exercise and a revenge vehicle than a real cost-saving venture?
api•1mo ago
Seemed like it was more about an ideological purge and possibly exfiltrating data than saving money.

I predicted it would net cost money if you did a full accounting. May end up being true.

goku12•1mo ago
> I predicted it would net cost money if you did a full accounting. May end up being true.

People don't appreciate the role of a working executive branch and government bureaucracy in keeping the nation working, stable and relatively free from unfair practices, no matter how inefficient they may seem. In most cases, they are inefficient and have other problems because they're understaffed.

expedition32•1mo ago
That's because tech billionaires don't need all of that. They live in a bubble.

It's the same with Trump. Do you think he has ever been inside a grocery store?

goku12•1mo ago
I absolutely agree about the billionaires. Not just because they're out of touch with reality, those government agencies are big hurdles to their pursuit of unlimited wealth by any means necessary. This was splendidly evident in the way Musk targeted the agencies that were either regulating or investigating his companies.

But what perplexes me is the hostility against government bureaucrats shown by ordinary people who are getting impoverished. I see them routinely complaining online that government workers are lazy parasites who live off their tax money. Some people take it further, saying that these workers are part of the 'deep state' out to enslave them.

Sure! Any bureaucracy will have some bad apples and corruption. But how do they miss the part that the government bureaucracy is the last line of defense blocking their all out exploitation? Like others point out, most government workers are too qualified and work too hard for what they are paid. They often take a pay cut to work on their passion and help everyone in the process. You can see this in the numerous bureaucrats who strongly resisted illegal and/or anti constitutional orders from the regime. Why are the people so oblivious to these?

expedition32•1mo ago
Oh they will absolutely notice when they have to wait an entire day at the DMV for an extension of their driver's license.
hydrogen7800•1mo ago
No, that's just going to reinforce that government doesn't work, which justifies starving the beast further. I don't know how one party has so successfully created this feedback loop, where the more they lose, the more they win. I guess its simply that destruction is easier than creation
hydrogen7800•1mo ago
Abstraction. They can't see how a functioning government benefits them. The only people who need a functioning government, in their mind, are the leeches and welfare queens, not the hard working rugged individuals like them who have never taken a penny in government aid (again abstraction. Tax policy that subsidizes mortgage holders, for example, does not occur to them as a handout. Or social security. It's not a handout because "I paid into it", not considering that they get back more than they contributed).
goku12•1mo ago
Makes sense. But why is that? Are they not educated enough to realize it? Or don't they bother to apply their common sense to such topics? Also, where do they get these weird alternative explanations from?

PS: I'm not from the US. What I know is from both mainstream and social media. I'm curious about the fundamental reasons on the ground too.

hydrogen7800•1mo ago
>where do they get these weird alternative explanations from?

Surely you're aware of cable news in the US, like Fox News, etc. but before that, for about 40 years now[0], AM talk radio has played a huge part in developing this messaging. I grew up with this as my main channel for awareness of current events, hearing about everything that happens through this lens.

I'm not sure if this [1] is accessible outside the US, but give a listen between 3 and 9 pm EST (GMT-5) though certainly not limited to these hours. You'll learn a lot about the American right wing mindset, and how the working and middle class is effectively messaged to. Talk radio is a lot more free form and ephemeral, so you'll hear a lot more improvised and extreme ideas than you would in a TV broadcast. It's quite a spectacle.

[0]https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fairness_doctrine

[1]https://710wor.iheart.com/

FireBeyond•1mo ago
> It's the same with Trump. Do you think he has ever been inside a grocery store?

I mean, he's literally been quoted as thinking you need photo ID to go in a supermarket.

queenkjuul•1mo ago
If musk, Trump, or any of their allies had any interest in cutting spending, they wouldn't have passed budgets increasing the deficit every chance they've had.

Must got what he wanted: some minor disruption to agencies that regulate him personally, the fear of god put into thousands of federal employees, and ostensibly federal data to help him bust unions.

The side effect of disrupting thousands of normal hard working people's lives it's just icing on the cake for a miserable prick like him, even if he did have to hire most of them back.

But if they could destroy the regulatory state while ALSO doubling the deficit with federal spending on defense, space, and oil, i don't doubt for a second they would do so.

ourmandave•1mo ago
Because of the sheer idiocy of all involved.

There was no plan, no thought process behind any of the cuts.

Unless they thought appearing to be complete morons would distract from their actual mission of stealing all the Federal data they could.

The whole operation of black hats need to be investigated.

goku12•1mo ago
> Unless they thought appearing to be complete morons would distract from their actual mission of stealing all the Federal data they could.

That and the fact that many of the targeted organizations were regulating Musk's companies or even investigating them for serious violations. I don't think that I've seen such a blatant display of conflict of interest quite like this one.

diego_moita•1mo ago
Because what they wanted was to "disrupt" and "saving" wasn't what they wanted.
cjoelrun•1mo ago
Immune systems of all interested triggered.
stranded22•1mo ago
Because it was about Elon musk’s companies getting out of being investigated. His pay off for helping Trump.
jgbmlg•1mo ago
2nd law of thermodynamics is what makes destructiveness so costly. It is much easier and cheaper to destroy than to build or rebuild. The Trump administration is devaluing the United States at an alarming rate.
goku12•1mo ago
As I understand it, this is to wreck the government oversight on the conduct of the rich and the powerful. They really want to establish a full blown oligarchy. And they managed to convince the poor people that the government is bad for them too.
silexia•1mo ago
Biased article behind a paywall.
tlogan•1mo ago
The goal was to disrupt government bureaucracy. Saving money was never the real objective, even though it was marketed that way.

Anyone who knows how to use Excel understands that entitlements and defense are the biggest issue (60%) when it comes to government spending.

sokoloff•1mo ago
On top of that 60% is ~13% on net interest payments.
Havoc•1mo ago
I don’t buy that it was ever aimed at saving any more than RFK is about running a competent health dept
TheOtherHobbes•1mo ago
The US is being run by a hostile regime which is intent on destroying wealth, health, stability, and credibility.

The people who have convinced themselves government is evil and taxes are bad are useful idiots. They're being used by others who very much want to destroy the US as a superpower.

Musk is between the two. He's acting to keep his ass out of jail, and he's a True Believer in certain senses.

But ultimately he's disposable, and will be removed when he's no longer useful.

firesteelrain•1mo ago
Evidence? You can’t make outlandish claims and don’t back it up
xgkickt•1mo ago
It was a smash & grab.
cedws•1mo ago
Or smash and delete. If you needed to infiltrate government to cover something up you wouldn’t go straight for it. You would infiltrate many points at once and create chaos and misdirection to obfuscate what you’re really doing.
TheOtherHobbes•1mo ago
Backdoors. US government privacy is now compromised at most levels.
Nasrudith•1mo ago
Nitpick. Governments don't have privacy. They have opacity. Don't anthropomorphize governments, especially not to that extent.
jalapenos•1mo ago
Because the whole thing wasn't actually wanted. They just needed some theatre to make it look like they were fulfilling their campaign promise.

Trying to get a government to reduce its spending from within is stupid and naive.

There is no scenario, no matter who is voted in, where government spending goes down. They just talk about it, and then increase spending on the things they like (e.g. the last "big beautiful bill").

This was the primary cause of the Trump-Musk spat: former promised the latter a cost cutting campaign, but it was just a trick, used only to destroy those parts of the government he disliked like USAID, after which he promptly neutered it and signed a massive spending bill, basically having conned him.

If it has actually been wanted - something that's literally impossible unless it was say created through an Article 5 convention - it would have been effective.

faidit•1mo ago
Even if removing corruption was an actual goal, the big corrupt whales that do exist were/are just like Elon himself, all well-connected and had already paid their bribes to the current regime, making them untouchable.
deafpolygon•1mo ago
The disruption was the point — it was all distraction while Trump worked on setting up his second term.
postalrat•1mo ago
Politics ensures that nobody will know what was actually saved and lost.
damion6•1mo ago
Because that was the point.
daheza•1mo ago
I saw first hand the damage that was done by Elon's little purge. I saw people who were actively trying to make the world better - heal the sick, feed the hungry, and help the unfortunate - blindly struck down from doing those goals by a tiny egotistical mans joke of a initiative.

I will personally never purchase or use anything from any of Elon Musk's companies ever again for the rest of my life and I push others to do the same and share their stories. This selfishness from a man with so much money and yet he only uses it for his own personal gain and to hurt others is disgusting.

brcmthrowaway•1mo ago
I'd be interested who here commenting negatively on DOGE actually has skin in the game (an American taxpayer)
zem•1mo ago
destroying things is extremely easy. there are typically a few ways for something to be working well and countless ways for it to be broken.
wormius•1mo ago
A few comments here touching on "disruption" (especially considering SV's historical mantras about "disruption" and "easier to beg forgiveness than ask permission").

So I think a good renaming is in order: Disruption of Government Efficiency

Slows it down to give them time to catch up, especially in this new tech era.

I read Wired in the 90s, I remember the Libertarian Logic.

The best part is "Oh gee, we might doom society, we should think about these things... hmm. OK, guys, let's keep building it."

Fuck it, let's straight up Stalin it, not just remove restrictions but FORCE these fuckers into slave camps building it all out, industrializing (Siliconizing? LLM-izing?) the future landscape.

We've already bent our "conservative principles" in the name of corporate expediency and fascistic tendencies (who doesn't love a little "public/private" co-operation).

The worst part is, most of these people have no principle and are merely opportunistic rent seekers bent on bending the rules for me, not for thee.

stuaxo•1mo ago
Hubris, greed, corruption and contempt for four.
Eggpants•1mo ago
Because it was really about serving red meat to the MAGA base. My relatives in Kentucky cheered because they believed the “all those lazy blacks are getting fired” narrative. It’s so strange to me as they are deeply religious and some of the kindest folks I know, but also the most racist.
throwawayqqq11•1mo ago
Religiosity, egomaniac libertarians, racists, etc. all suffer from an identity based cognitive bias revolving around their own or groups well being. These tribal members dont think critically about the $symbol related to their own or group identity, and the scary part is, these symbols could be anything and not just define their own ingroup but their opposing outgroup too, like eg. being vegetarian, riding a bicycle or showing broad empathy.

IMO in severe cases it requires serious therapy to teach them to face social media or group gatherings with a different/critical mindset, that naturally comes after some unpleasant disillusionment but is needed before mistakes are made. If your realtive is not treatable, completely shut, you will talk to a brick wall.

I hate to say it but Musk had a point, when he talked about twitter and his attempt "to cure the mind virus" (but as usual, he was clueless or biased). This identity based cognitive bias or identity politics is present on both political sides. The right/conservatives are just more susceptible, thats why religion, racism, libertarianism, etc. are often comorbid.

pnt12•1mo ago
Some religious people play their kind persona at church, to excuse the unkind persona in other situations.
metalman•1mo ago
doge went in to crack the internal records of huge government silos, in order to leverage the inevitable evidence of wholsale,corruption, nepotism, vice, and illegal political involvments. and lo and behold, everybody lined up and is doing whatever tumpy says, which will be to hand over, most....but not all, of the stolen money, useing the same mechanisms to move it as before.
NuclearPM•1mo ago
Evil people, corruption, and very stupid voters.
tmaly•1mo ago
It seems very little could be saved without an act of Congress.

I recall there was an interview of Bessent early on, on the All in One podcast where they laid out the plan for DOGE to cut 1 trillion. I don't think they even came close to a fraction of that.

panick21_•1mo ago
Because politics is about short term social media hype and not lasting change. Everybody who has ever studied the budget know that social services, debt payment and the military are the budget. Trying to effect any change with a major overall of these, or massive now broad taxes will not solve the problem.

And politically the right can't increase taxes and the can't serously reform social services either. But likely it would lead to that eventially.

So its literally just two parties fighting over trivial social media wins while debt pill and yearly debt upkeeep spending grows.

neuralkoi•1mo ago
“If you cannot understand why someone did something, look at the consequences—and infer the motivation.”

― Carl Jung