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Jane in NC's avatar

Not only was DOGE unfamiliar with how government works, they're also unfamiliar with how most of corporate America works. Nearly every corporate employee in America shares the public sector's frustration about too many meetings and slow decision making. DOGE assumed that the Silicon Valley model of 'move fast and break things' would be accepted because it's universal. It's not; they were wrong. But there were too arrogant to know what they didn't know.

The worst aspect of DOGE, however, isn't just that they ignored existing laws regarding privacy and impoundment of federal funds, it's that those allegedly in charge of vast sectors of the government, the cabinet secretaries, completely rolled over for DOGE and allowed them authority that neither the law nor their own prerogatives as cabinet members should have allowed.

It will take years and billions of dollars to repair DOGE's 'fixes' to public data systems and the rehiring of people with actual expertise in their areas of government. In the end, the only thing DOGE saved us was having to worry about spending billions of dollars to accomplish good things because we'll be spending that tax money fixing their damage.

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Leigh Horne's avatar

Doesn't it seem to anyone else that an interesting way to understand the whole 'move fast and break (substitute gun down, blow up or otherwise eliminate) things blitzkrieg mentality is that it was forged within the views and understanding of the tech elite within the context of the days and hours, months and years the 'boyz' spent sitting in front of video game consoles, competing to zap anything that was preventing them from getting to the next level in one game after another? Human progress is so much more nuanced, differently paced, and inclusive of opposing points of views than that.

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