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De Omnibus Dubitandum - Lux Veritas

Showing posts with label Deep State Purge. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Deep State Purge. Show all posts

Friday, July 25, 2025

Layoffs at – Versus Because of – Federal Agencies

By Paul Driessen

Secretary of State Marco Rubio recently fired 1,350 employees. The “reductions in force” brought tears, outrage, proclamations of resistance to “fascism,” and disbelief that federal workers could actually lose their “lifetime” jobs.
 
Losing one’s job and income is hard, disruptive and demoralizing – which helps explain why the RIFs received extensive coverage across the United States and overseas, and why most stories emphasized the anger and grievances of fired workers, their colleagues and unions.

However, equally important perspectives and realities must also be recognized.

State Department employment rolls had grown by 22,874 over 17 years: from 57,340 US and international employees in 2007 to 80,214 in 2024. The July layoffs were 5.9% of this growth; 1.7% of total 2024 employees.

The downsizing was part of a Trump-Rubio reorganization to streamline a bloated State Department and align it more closely with the administration’s policies and priorities, partly by eliminating or merging bureaus and offices, including those focused on DEI, transgender and “climate crisis” issues.

It recognizes the Trump, Vance and American voters’ belief in (and commitment to) reducing the size of government and the scope of its control over our lives, livelihoods, energy and personal choices.

Private sector companies often have to trim payrolls or shut down entirely – mostly with little more than local coverage. Journalist Amy Curtis noted that she lost her first nursing job when her medical facility closed, partly because of Medicare’s “abysmal reimbursement rates.”

“There were no tearful parades for us essential workers,” she observed. No politicians or journalists railed about how “unfair and dangerous it was to fire nurses, respiratory therapists and doctors” – and send them, support staff, spouses and children into food centers, poverty, debt and search for new employment.

Job losses triggered by government policies and edicts receive even less attention, especially from Democrats and the legacy media. On Day One of his presidency, Joe Biden shut the Keystone Pipeline project down, terminating up to 11,000 manufacturing and construction jobs.

Between 2008 and 2016, the coal industry lost over 80,000 jobs – casualties of cheaper, less polluting natural gas electricity generation and, even more so, the Obama Administration’s “war on coal.”

Billionaire Michael Bloomberg gave $174 million to the Sierra Club and other radical greens to finance their Beyond Coal Campaign and buttress the Obama efforts. 2019 presidential candidate Joe Biden said the jobless miners should just “learn to code. Anybody who can go down 3,000 feet in a mine can sure as hell learn to program!” Combined federal programs promised a paltry $7 million in job retraining aid.

The Obama EPA went after coal-fired generating plants with equal zeal, using questionable to bogus claims about climate change, mercury and fine particulates to justify its actions. One victim was the Navajo Nation’s coal-fired power plant and Kayenta mine, mainstays of the tribal economy.

The Navajos lost 700 jobs and $40 million in annual revenue. There were no viable replacements. So much for “environmental justice” for indigenous people.

Nor is it only jobs and revenues. These government actions also brought reduced living standards and healthcare … and increased risks of depression, diabetes, cardiovascular disease, alcohol and drug use, spousal and child abuse, and premature death within involuntarily unemployed families and communities.

Once the Obama-Biden Administrations demolished coal, they went after natural gas, and those jobs.

Federal, state and local government restrictions on public gatherings during Covid ruined thousands of bars, gyms, restaurants and other small businesses, costing millions of jobs and incomes. NY Governor Andrew Cuomo forced nursing homes to accept elderly Covid patients, likely killing thousands – and then buried data about the actual disease and death tolls. Some lockdowns lasted almost two years.

Thousands of military personnel were booted for refusing to get vaccines that evidence increasingly showed posed myocarditis and other risks for young men who had little to fear from Covid 19.

On a far larger scale, the grand scheme for a legislated, mandated “transition” to “cheaper” wind and solar power would mean rising electricity costs, widespread environmental impacts and millions of lost jobs.

The final votes on the Big Beautiful Budget Bill restored many federal wind and solar subsidies. A slim majority of senators and representatives bought into claims that lost federal funding would jeopardize investments and projects in their districts and states, put hundreds of thousands of “green energy” jobs at risk, and cause electricity prices to surge, threatening still more jobs.

In the real world, wind and solar power are far more expensive than coal, gas, hydro pr nuclear electricity.

The higher costs are paid directly through higher utility bills, or indirectly via higher taxes to finance subsidies. Both are often cleverly disguised or hidden. But the result worldwide is that electricity costs rise in tandem with a country or state’s reliance on wind and solar power.

Germany and Britain have among the most “nameplate” megawatts of wind and solar globally – and highest electricity prices: 3x higher than average US prices; up to 4x higher than in 30 US states. That’s why so many European automotive, glass and steel companies are slashing payrolls or closing shop.

Every megawatt of wind and solar must be backed up with expensive, duplicative, reliable power generation for the hours, days and weeks when wind and sunshine fail to do their job. And wind and solar installations are typically far from data and urban centers that need their electricity, requiring long transmission lines ($1-8 million per mile) and numerous transformers that adjust voltage up for transmission and down for consumption (up to $4 million per unit).

Backup power can come from coal or natural gas generators – or from vastly more expensive (and fire-prone) grid-scale batteries that would cost American taxpayers and ratepayers trillions of dollars.

All those costs get added to utility and tax bills, making it especially hard for energy-intensive hospitals, factories and other businesses to afford electricity without raising prices, reducing services, issuing pink slips, closing their doors, or all of the above.

As to those “hundreds of thousands of American green energy jobs,” they’re mostly in constructing, maintaining, removing and landfilling these installations. The mining, processing and manufacturing jobs (for the incomprehensible amounts of raw materials needed to make all this “renewable” energy equipment) are mostly overseas, primarily in China, mostly burn coal for fuel, and have few or no pollution control, workplace safety or child labor regulations.

None of this includes the costs of croplands, wildlife habitats and scenic vistas destroyed for “clean” energy installations, birds and bats killed by turbine blades, or reduced living standards resulting from recurrent blackouts, higher utility costs that make proper heating and air conditioning out of reach for many, and having electricity when it’s available instead of when we need it.

Americans are right to be more concerned about all of this than about State Department layoffs. We clearly need fewer federal offices and employees promoting “climate crisis” and “renewable energy” reports, GIGO computer models, DEI, junk science and fearmongering.  

Paul Driessen is senior policy analyst for the Committee For A Constructive Tomorrow (www.CFACT.org) and author of books and articles on energy, environment, climate change and human rights issues.

Thursday, July 24, 2025

Trump vs. Bureaucrats

July 22, 2025 by Dan Mitchell @ International Liberty

While Trump’s protectionism means a very misguided tax increase on American consumers and businesses, some of his other fiscal policies are praiseworthy.

The spending reforms in the One Big Beautiful Bill are small, but laudable. The changes to Medicaid, for instance, save money and limit costly gimmicks by state governments.

The rescission bill only saves about $9 billion (out of about $7 trillion!), but I’m delighted that Big Bird and the rest of the moochers at NPR and CPB have been defunded.

I also have to give Trump credit for cutting the bureaucracy. Here’s a chart that shows how some bureaucracies will be pared between 2024 and 2026.

The above visuals come from an article in the Washington Post by Jeremy B. Merrill, Kati Perry, and Jacob Bogage.

Here are some of the relevant excerpts.

 

President Donald Trump and his advisers have called for dramatically shrinking the size and scope of the federal government, dispatching officials to agency after agency to block funding and slash staffing. …As part of Trump’s 2026 budget request, the White House laid out in detail how many employees the executive branch hopes to cut. It envisions a government with 5 percent fewer employees compared to the final year of the Biden administration. 

That would cut more than 114,000 jobs, while adding several thousand for immigration enforcement and border security. The government would go from having about 2,142,000 employees in 2024 to about 2,028,000 in 2026. That figure reflects full-time employment, even if one job is done by two part-timers. …The Agriculture Department, where the White House is calling for the most cuts, would shed more than 31,000 employees — about 35 percent of its 91,000 employees as of last year. … 

The departments of Education, Labor, Housing and Urban Development, and the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission, all longtime targets of some conservative policymakers, would also see thousands fewer employees. …The departments of Commerce and Homeland Security would gain thousands of new jobs, including at the Patent and Trademark Office, Customs and Border Protection, and the Coast Guard.

Speaking of bureaucracies that are gaining workers, here are the depressing visuals from the story.

Since some these departments (such as Transportation and Commerce) shouldn’t exist, I obviously prefer the red boxes from above to these green boxes.

I’ll close by noting that Trump’s plan to shed 100,000-plus bureaucrats is not radical.

As you can see from this FedWeek data, the overall size of the bureaucracy has been growing steadily.

Assuming Trump is successful, America will still have far more bureaucrats in 2026 than it did under Bush or Clinton.

Moreover, firing bureaucrats may not necessarily save money if the law says an agency has to spend a certain amount of money. So it will be interesting to see whether Trump demands (and Congressional Republicans deliver) smaller budgets.

Based on Trump’s profligacy in his first term, I’m not optimistic. But maybe some of his appointees learned from those mistakes and will be more aggressive now.

P.S. The number of bureaucrats is not the only problem. Another problem is that they tend to be overpaid compared to their counterparts in the productive sector of the economy.

Saturday, June 28, 2025

P&D and The Week That Was

 Truth is the Sublime Convergence of History and Reality

De Omnibus Dubitandum, (Everything is to be questioned!)

This Link will take you to My Commentaries.
 
By Rich Kozlovich 
 
 
The disaster of the Biden administration keeps unfolding as Congress investigates the AutoPen scandal.  A top Biden White House aide, Neera Tanden, testified how she was authorized to use the Autopen, explaining she would send a request to Biden's "inner circle" and get a response back, but seemingly claims she has no idea who in the inner circle was authorized to give her that permission.  Then when asked if she ever discussed Biden's mental decline with anyone in the leadership.....she said no, which is as believable as saying rain isn't wet. 
 
A Democrat member of the committee claims she's lying, and has been told by staffer (name not shared) all Autopen uses were directly authorized by Joe Biden, yet there's evidence he had no idea about at least one authorization.  Someone's lying.   Her testimony lasted five hours, and I'm betting she'll be back, right along with this unnamed staffer who refutes her testimony. 
 
Before this I pretty much thought this was good politics but was going nowhere because all Biden has to say is he authorized all of it.  But the facts and the testimony coming out makes me wonder if that will work.  As the author notes if people are found to have committed perjury and face prison time.... they'll squeal to save themselves.  
 
Congress is also investigating what is roundly believed to be illegal fundraising by ActBlue, and Trump wants a special prosecutor to investigate the massive levels of voter fraud involved in the 2020 election. The DOJ just fired three "high ranking" prosecutors of January 6 defendants, and the Oversight Project has referred former FBI Director Wray to DOJ for criminal charges.   The purge must never stop, as the rot is deep and wide, and if this window of opportunity closes, it may never open again.
 
Trump's negotiating skills really are amazing.  He just brokered a peace deal ending 3 decades of war in Africa between Rwanda and the Democratic Republic of the Congo.  In twelve days he brokered a peace deal between Israel and Iran.  He's also gotten Netanyahu to agree to end the Gaza War, and expand Abraham Accords.  
 
But let's not kid ourselves, this Iran deal is fragile on the best of days.  Iran's rhetoric about destroying Israel and America is just as virulent now as it was last month, and should have been obvious to the most casual observer this would be the case as long as this regime remained in place, with them actually claiming all that destruction was a slap in the face to America and an Iranian victory. 
 
Iran Threatens Retaliation Over Trump’s ‘Disrespectful’ Jabs at ‘Foolish’ Supreme Leader  Iran’s foreign minister has issued a warning over President Donald Trump’s jabs at the Islamic Republic’s so-called “supreme leader.”.......Abbas Araghchi accused the American president of using a “disrespectful and unacceptable tone” toward Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei. He demanded that Trump show “respect” or face serious consequences.........
 
 Wake up, America, Muslims hate us, the game is not over when dealing with rabid ayatollahs who insist they're never going to give up on building a nuclear bomb.  As one writer noted:
 
Iran’s response has not just been military but also domestic. The regime has gone into siege mode. Internet access is cut. Checkpoints were established throughout the streets to inspect vehicles, and young people’s mobile phones were confiscated to determine if they had posted anything against the regime. Additionally, mass arrests targeted individuals accused of sympathizing with Israel or criticizing the government. More than at any time in the past, the Islamic Republic is trying to intimidate the Iranian people; in fact, it is trying to compensate for its loss on the battlefield and ongoing repression at home.
 
I've wondered why Trump made Israel stop their assault on Iran allowing them to finish the job.  Personally, I think it's because Trump wants the Nobel Peace Prize so badly he's allowing this fixation to mold his thinking.  A prize I don't think he'll get, but he gets it, he should reject  it. 
 
There’s a movie about the K-19: The Widowmaker, a Soviet submarine, where a lot of brave young men sacrifice themselves to save the crew. Harrison Ford is the captain and at the end of the movie the remaining members of the crew meet to honor their fallen comrades he says:

“For their courage I nominated these men for the title of hero of the Soviet Union. But the committee ruled that because it was not wartime, and because it was merely an accident, they were not worthy of the title hero. What good are honors from such people? These men sacrificed, not for a medal. But because when the time came, it was their duty. Not to the navy, or to the state, but to us. Their comrades.”

I put this in the same category.  "The Nobel Peace Prize often aligns with Norwegian liberal views, undermining its credibility and purpose."  When an organization is so corrupt it gives ‘honors’ to, among others of ill repute, Jimmy Carter claiming he was untiring in his efforts to "find peaceful solutions to international conflicts, to advance democracy and human rights", when in reality "Carter's sympathy for the leftward and violent fringe cost more lives than it saved."  Barack Obama for doing nothing, and Yasser Arafat for the lie of trying to bring peace to the Middle East, "what good are honors from such people?"

The Big Beautiful Bill is now facing another road block, the Senate Parliamentarian, as she's gutting more and more parts of the Big Beautiful Bill, including Medicaid changes in order to cut waste, and her ruling on Medicaid for illegals, all of which will require 60 votes to pass, and GOP  lawmakers are to say the least... upset, and no one really believes she's impartial. 
 
Where in the Constitution is there any mention of a Senate Parliamentarian?  There isn't!  It was created by the Senate and in 1937, and in point of fact the majority leader in the Senate can overrule her, but Thune refuses to do that.  And he can fire her, and since he's such an invertebrate in failing to overrule her, he won't fire her.  I keep wondering if the Majority Leader can do that, why can't the President of the Senate, Vice President J.D. Vance do that? The Founders would not recognize America today, and not because of the technology, because of what government has morphed into, the nation's values, and society's morality.
 
This week I have seven commentaries of my own, and I think they're really well done.  One video link, eighteen by others, and the six permanent links.  Enjoy!
 

My Commentaries

  1. Ketanji Brown Jackson's Race to the Top
  2. Is Zohran Mamdani Really the Anointed One?
  3. What about the Houthis?
  4. Israel Iranian War
  5. A Cesspool of Halfwits, Nitwits, Misfits, Dipsticks, and Meritless Pinheads
  6. Trump Bombs Iran, and Exposes the Hypocrisy of the Democrats
  7. An Abundance of Uncertainties

 


Thursday, February 20, 2025

Won’t Someone Please Think of the Government?

By @ Sultan Knish Blog 

Democrats had expected to begin the cold new year by throwing a great pity party for illegal aliens, instead they have had to paint on their tears for a new victim: the government.

The government is what they had really been talking about all along when they flipped through their roster of victims, Mother Earth, illegals, criminals, welfare queens, drag queens, and put their solutions on the table, solar panels, open borders, open prisons, free stuff and pronouns.

Social justice really means more government. It’s only government that can get rid of the racist highways, rising (or falling) temperatures, the isms and the phobias, save the planet, keep cities weird and raise up the wretched, huddled masses yearning to never work a day in their lives.

Every form of victimhood is government misspelled. Whatever the question, government is the eternal answer. And now the answer is being questioned not in rhetoric, in op-eds, position papers or FOX News commentaries, but by being taken out in the middle of D.C. and sliced up.

The media has scrambled to make portions of the government identifiable and relatable as it had done for Central American gang members, murderers on death row and six foot tall men who want to play professional sports against five foot tall women, but this is just too much.

There are women who write love letters to serial killers, school shooters have fan pages and there’s a booming market in Hitler memorabilia, but there’s nothing relatable about the gov.

All the stories of USAID contractors weeping their way back to America, the EPA bureaucrats who fear that they may have to get real jobs and the Department of Education hacks who won’t know what to do without their end of the year office furniture buying orgies have touched no one.

“I would love to leave, but I don’t know where I’d go,” a bewildered State Department employee told Politico. He had perhaps heard of the concept of the private sector, but in D.C. such things are one with Santa, the Easter Bunny and a balanced budget as stories you tell little children.

What is one to do when not working for the government? You may as well ask the caged bird to look up at the big blue sky instead of the rusting bars and bowl of turgid water. Just don’t ask the average American outside the bedroom communities of Virginia to wear black for them.

761,358 Americans lost their jobs last year. And their jobs were generally of the kind in which they worked for a living and had their salaries paid by private enterprises, not taxpayers.

Americans have never liked the government much, but then what people ever have? The difference was that over 200 years ago, their ancestors did something about employing measures that ranged from generous applications of tar and feathers to tax collectors to gathering with guns on the tops of hills and shooting at the whites of the eyes of redcoats.

Even all these centuries later, Americans remain unsympathetic to the travails of government.

The media, that is to say the communications arm of the government, would like us to be very upset that $5 billion in funding for electric car chargers (of which a mere 55 have currently been built at the rate of a nice $90 million a charger) have been cut off by the Trump administration.

The public is told to demand that half a billion in foodstuffs and grain be shipped by USAID to Somalia, Afghanistan and other even less nice parts of the world. And the public shrugged. It is told to be agitated that $900 million in Department of Education research must be set aside.

A St. Louis school district where only 1 in 5 children can read will not be getting its electric buses. Can’t you ignorant rubes see what the government does for you, the media prods.

Unlike old school class warfare, very little of this has to do with any portion of the public. And even welfare queens look down on government bureaucrats as by far the bigger parasites.

The proper attitude in D.C. is to look at.$236 billion in “improper payments” in one year and shrug it off as the cost of doing government business. And the public has long since also learned to shrug it off as government corruption. But that hasn’t fostered any affection for the trillion dollar budgets or any conviction that government spending ought to be sacrosanct.

When congressional Democrats take the government hostage semi-annually and threaten a government shutdown (as they are planning to do next month), the public only cares because they are told that it will affect them personally. But very little of the DOGE business now being enacted affects anyone except government employees. And there is very little that the great army of government employees does that is of any interest to anyone other than themselves.

If the Department of Education, the EPA and most of the rest of the morass of government were to disappear tomorrow, the effect would be as negligible as the impact of USAID being rolled into a rug and shipped back to whatever third world country it came from was on Americans.

Some might optimistically believe that it would free up trillions in taxpayer money (but such optimists have never seen more of D.C. than the museums) but the one thing it would not do is significantly affect the lives of most people. Some would be freed of assorted regulatory burdens (that would probably soon be supplemented by even more state regulatory burdens) and only the lifetime career employees would hang around D.C. like canaries with busted cage doors.

Making the case for them is easy for members of Congress, but hard for anyone else.

Crazies admire serial killers and terrorists because they appear to be moved by some great and terrible passion, but the expanding government bureaucracy is where leftist activism ends. If the purple haired shouter in the street with a keffiyah draped over their pronoun buttons and Che t-shirts is where the movement begins, the big gray brutalist buildings are where it ends.

And the Trump administration is proposing to sell off those buildings to the highest bidder.

Activism, no matter how evil, can be inspiring, but there is nothing inspiring about 22,000 square feet of office space, stacks of Hammermill paper and rows of printers all producing enough government regulatory documents that they could be used to build a paper bridge to the moon.

Communism was exciting when Lenin and Stalin were shooting children, but by the 80s, not even the most die-hard Communist could make the Kremlin seem like anything except the headquarters of a stolid tyranny run along ossified rules by drunken elderly bureaucrats.

D.C. is our Kremlin and nobody outside that government citadel cares for it very much.

“Won’t someone please think of the children,” is a timeless classic. “Won’t someone please think of the working class” had a pretty good run for the Left. Even recent variants such as “Won’t someone please think of the cartel members” and “Won’t someone please think of castrating the children” scored points in parts of San Francisco, but “Won’t someone please think of the government” won’t play anywhere outside of Washington D.C.

Daniel Greenfield is a Shillman Journalism Fellow at the David Horowitz Freedom Center. This article previously appeared at the Center's Front Page Magazine.  Click here to subscribe to my articles. And click here to support my work with a donation.
Thank you for reading.
is a columnist, an investigative journalist and a Shillman Journalism Fellow at the David Horowitz Freedom Center

Wednesday, February 5, 2025

The Trump Shake-Up Has Washington Scared Stiff

And we’re only two weeks in.

By | Feb 4, 2025 @ Liberty Nation News, Tags: Articles, Opinion, Politics

At age 78 and in his final term as commander-in-chief, President Donald Trump appears to be moving his agenda ahead at a breakneck pace. From the northern border to the southern and everywhere in between, all the president’s men (and women) are shaking up the status quo. This shift from the 46th to the 47th chief executive is a study in contrasts, effectuating head-spinning changes. As the president works overtime to fulfill his campaign promises, the minions who run Washington, DC, and have existed in a fishbowl of unchallenged power don’t appear to be taking the blows to their authority well. And the shake-up is just getting started.

In the words of the New York Post’s Miranda Devine, “Heads are spinning in Washington at the shock-and-awe tactics of Trump 2.0. You can hear the panic in the high pitch of Deep State voices as they run squealing to CNN and MSNBC.” Indeed, the left-wing media is struggling to keep up with this unique force of nature called Trump, who is a man on a mission.

Just last week, the ladies on The View took a swing at Democratic Sen. John Fetterman (D-PA), who refused to kowtow to their anti-Trump rhetoric and barked back at them. Over at NBC, Chuck Todd announced he is bowing out, and CNN’s Jim Acosta was given the microphone and camera one last time to say farewell. It’s challenging, but we shall resist the overwhelming urge to make ad hominem remarks about Todd and Acosta. Let’s just say they are no friends of Trump and leave it at that.

The Trump Shake-Up — Time to Clean House

However, as the leftist media crumbles, the bureaucrats in the nation’s capital are on the hot seat and seemingly unprepared for the shake-up. Over at the Department of Justice – yes, those friendly folks who couldn’t resist rifling through Melania’s underwear drawer – were given their comeuppance. Six high-level FBI officials who oversaw the Mar-a-Lago raid and who directed SWAT raids on J6 protesters were given the choice to resign or be fired. This move came on the heels of an email blast informing 2 million federal workers that they had the option to show up for work in person or resign. Their exit package reveals the president would prefer to give them their walking papers.

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To punctuate his point, the president had his Department of Justice request thousands of FBI agents fill out a survey that detailed their involvement in the J6 debacle. It’s assumed the questionnaire is not for the purpose of handing out participation trophies.

Meanwhile, much whining could be heard when Trump removed the security clearances of the so-called “Dirty 51,” the intelligence officials who falsely claimed the Hunter Biden laptop was nothing more than a Russian disinformation campaign. Former CIA Director John Brennan howled on MSNBC, “[T]his was just, you know, his effort to try to get back at those individuals who have criticized him openly and publicly in the past, and I think very legitimately.”

Money, Money, Money, Maaa-nee!

As Trump works to exact a price for myriad shameful and unconstitutional acts perpetrated against him, his supporters, and associates, the adage “He who has the gold rules” came into sharp focus. Leave it to a man who knows how to sign the front of a check – Elon Musk – to begin slashing billions across the federal government stratosphere. In a post on his X platform, the wealthiest man in the world revealed, “The DOGE team discovered among others that the payment approval officers at Treasury were known to always approve payments even to known fraudulent or terrorist groups.”

The Department of Government Efficiency also has plans to either shut down the US Agency for International Development (USAID), which spent $50 billion – with a “b” – in taxpayer funding, or roll it into the State Department with a much-reduced budget. An explanatory video outlining the purpose and mission of AID featured Foundation for Freedom Online founder Mike Benz, who clarified the purpose of this mammoth agency, which is not aid-oriented but instead acts as an arm of the State Department and is, in essence, an extension of the Central Intelligence Agency.

These actions – and others not mentioned – go to the heart of righting the wrongs that were committed by the administration of Joe Biden, who weaponized powerful government agencies for the purpose of destroying a political opponent. And they demonstrate to the American people that those who participated in this ideological pogrom that tarnished democracy must be held accountable for their conduct. Above all, this shake-up by the Trump administration illustrates how such actions must have consequences.

~

Liberty Nation does not endorse candidates, campaigns, or legislation, and this presentation is no endorsement.

Read More From Leesa K. Donner Executive Editor

Monday, February 3, 2025

DOGE and The Deep State Purge, Part I

"What's best in life? To crush your enemies, see them driven before you, and hear the lamentations of their women." Conan the Barbarian

By Rich Kozlovich

I've updated this piece DAILY showing just how corrupt, and even treasonous, USAID has been, and the updates are getting so large I've tried to organize them into categories. At least as best as I can since so much of what they were doing overlapped.   One thing is becoming clear to me as the information accumulates; in order to make sure it's all properly exposed I will have to do an individual piece on each category.  

Have no doubt someone is going to prison, and the investigations will lead to - "let's make a deal" - by the flunkys and lackeys of these organizations who did the dirty work in order to avoid the full weight of the justice system upon them,  Those deals will lead to the upper echelon of the Democrat party, these bureaucracies, and possibly some RINO's.

"Here are the highest paid employees of USAID. As Dems are wont to say, You have to pay market rates to get the experts with the knowledge to run a govt. racket: USAID Highest Paid Employees"

Trump the Barbarian, is the Deep State’s worst nightmare, and it's happening at such a fast pace, and over the entire federal bureaucracy, the Democrats can't act fast enough because the evidence coming out about how they've corrupted the bureaucracy is so vast they're incapable of mounting a credible response. 

"For years, the strategy was simple—control the narrative, slow-walk investigations, drag out court cases, and create distractions. But the speed of Trump’s counteroffensive has shattered that plan. Every day brings another massive revelation, another purge, another humiliation for the so-called ruling class."........."Meanwhile, Democrat operative Jen Psaki has gone full Chicken Little, warning Americans that the “sky is falling.” And they’re right; just not for America.  The sky is falling for the Deep State. And it’s happening right now."

Yeah, the sky is falling all right, and some of them are going to jail.

How do they respond to China having spies in the White House, the massive corruption at USAID, even funding terrorists, and it turns out less than ten percent went to those who were deserving.  They tried to resist efforts by DOGE to investigate their actions, but I keep seeing this idea they're in charge, not the President of the United States.  They're learning they're not in charge.  USAID Security Chiefs Put on Leave After Refusing Musk.

Panic in the Deep State as DOGE Pulls Back the Curtain on USAID - Musk's wrecking ball "We're shutting it down," Musk said. Trump, talking to reporters last night, suggested a final decision hasn't been made. He said USAID is "run by radical lunatics"...."beyond repair"....... "a bowl of worms" with no apple."' 

Initially the Treasury department refused access to "classified information" about their payment system, but they keep forgetting, the President of the United States is the ultimate classifying authority, and if he says someone is cleared, that's it, they're cleared!  And now we know why they resisted, to cover up what can't be defined as anything but criminal activity.   At the Treasury department is was discovered that payment approval officers at the U.S. Treasury were simply rubber-stamping all payment requests that were submitted to them.   Musk Reveals Treasury Has Been Auto-Paying Everyone, ‘Even Known Terrorist Groups’,  “They literally never denied a payment in their entire career.”   Someone's going to jail over this. 

Eighty eight FBI agents were escorted out of the FBI offices, and that's just the beginning. Fifty one traitors have their security clearances revoked, and there will be prosecutions there, not to mention resignations by the number, and it's expected this is going to generate some serious deals for lower echelon people to start talking, and that will go to the top of the Democrat pyramid.  

The bureaucrats are unhappy, and claim they shouldn't have to go back to work.  Outrageous, being in an office 40 hours a week.  The head of the American Federation of Government Employees Union, Everett Kelly, explains:

“Purging the federal government of dedicated career federal employees will have vast, unintended consequences that will cause chaos for the Americans who depend on a functioning federal government,” Kelley said in a statement. “Between the flurry of anti-worker executive orders and policies, it is clear that the Trump administration’s goal is to turn the federal government into a toxic environment where workers cannot stay even if they want to.”

Something they just don't seem to get is Trump isn't taking over the Executive Branch, he "is" the Executive branch, the constitution says: The executive Power shall be vested in a President of the United States of America.

And we're hearing the lamentations of their women, and self styled "real conservatives", like Bill Kristol, who are leaches on the system, and he's not alone by any stretch of the imagination.  

Bill Kristol, who has been receiving funding from USAID, claims Deep State Corruption....and ultimate bankruptcy.... is preferable to Trump state.  Does anyone think that sounds sane?  That's as stupid as Axelrod saying USAID cuts is more radical that any spending.  More radical to whom?  Those who are corruptly befitting from that spending?  Certainly not for the American people.   I can't wait for the criminal investigations to begin.  

Now this from a man who I think is one of the weirdest human beings on the planet, Stephen King, saying Elon Musk is killing America, and has "quit Twitter because the “atmosphere has just become too toxic”'.  Toxic?  From Stephen King?  Really?  Now that is remarkable.  

Then there's Senator Warner who claims Trump’s actions will create chaos on steroids, offering no credible argument to support such a claim, but what is credible is targeting of NGO and nonprofit slush funds could recover billions.  That's not chaos for the  American people, it's chaos for those who've been leeching off the America taxpayer with the support of corrupt politicians and bureaucrats, many of which need to be investigated and prosecuted.  There's nothing like a good civil and/or criminal penalty to get people's heads on straight.

Why was the federal government funding grants to South Africa?  Trump Cuts Off Funding to South Africa over Racial Land Confiscation.  They're a murderous, brutal, corrupt far left racist government.  Isn't that was the America left is supposed to be opposed to?  The claim there are valid reasons to support this insane government but they are totally offset by their corruption, they politically motivated murders of white farmers, their unending support of Muslim terrorism against Israel, and have a cozy relationship with China and Russia.  None of which does anything for America.  If their population has a AIDS problem I think that's unfortunate, but how did that become our responsibility? 

Remember when all this was snottily, smugly, and snarkily called "conspiracy theories"?  Well, Senator John Kennedy recently noted: 

"We need more conspiracy theories since all the old ones have turned out to be true - Conspiracy theorists are up like 37 to nothing." 

Politicians may be driving this, and have been for years, but a new day is dawning, and it's the bureaucrats who have going to pay the penalty. I remember when 25 years ago or so the major league umpires went on strike, and the union told them to resign as a tactic to get MLB to agree to new terms.

Well,....that didn't work, and when the contract was finally signed, and those who followed their union reps advice, were out of jobs. As it turned out there were a lot of people who could do just as badly as they did, and cheaper.

The same will be true after the dust settles and tens of thousands of bureaucrats are out looking for jobs and who in their right mind would hire them? What are their qualifications? They can sign their names on welfare checks.... maybe.... as long as it's not in cursive. 

If there was any doubt there was going to be criminal action taken agaisnt these people, disabuse yourself of that, since now we know both USAID and the CIA were behind the impeachment of trump in 2019 all of which is absolute violation of federal law and considered treason. (More here)