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George Eberstadt's avatar

The fact that people don't trust the government to do the right thing all or most of the time (whatever that means), isn't good evidence the bureaucracy isn't performing. There are other possible explanations for increasing distrust that are more plausible than that a large number bureaucratic functions have somehow gone off the rails. One is that legislators are getting the will of the voters wrong, which is a problem with the legislative branch, not the executive branch. Don't like the CFPB? OK. Which branch created the CFPB? Another is an ever more polarized and politicized news environment. We need better evidence of the corruption and waste that DOGE claims to be solving.

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Bob Holmen's avatar

Hi Rob, great to read your thoughts on all this. I agree 100% that we need a massive disruption to redirect our government from never-ending growth filling whatever available space it can find to efficiently using taxpayer dollars to deliver essential services. However, I fear DOGE will be a big wasted opportunity that will set back the cause of government reform. The efforts to date seem opportunistic and random, driven by the determination (whims) of one man and his minions. Plus, the "real" problem with government over-spending, over-regulation, and over-reach comes from the top: the President, Congress and all the big money interests that put them in power (to further the big money interests' goals). DOGE can wipe out a bunch of government jobs (for now), but they will all come roaring back as soon as the next administration comes into power (or maybe when Trump changes his mind, as he tends to do daily, when he sees the next jobs report). Moreover, three of the big drivers of government spending (social security, healthcare and defense) are largely outside of DOGE (the defense department is trying to eliminate certain jobs so they can spend more elsewhere - no true DOGE going on here). As long as big money owns all the politicians, we will end up on the same trajectory, and in the meantime the DOGE effort will seem like petty, small actions driven more by personal pique and bias than a thoughtful reconsideration of government's role domestically and internationally.

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