DOGE has already saved the country $55 billion. President Trump has restored fairness in women's sports. He has opened up the country to drilling oil and mining our natural resources. Border crossings are down about 95% while the most violent Tren de Aragua gang members have been deported. All DEI programs in the federal government have been eliminated. We finally got relief out to North Carolina and Palestine, Ohio, after they had been ignored by Biden. Our government is more efficient, and the only thing that has stopped Trump (or slowed him down) has been Senate Democrats throwing a tantrum and running the 30 hour delay on every nominee despite knowing they have the votes to be confirmed. Probably the best first 100 days of any president ever.
Show me the $55 billion saved?

How many of those EOs are in litigation?

How does firing government employees make it more efficient? Are all those agencies that have been reamed, doing a better job at delivering services?
Is NOAA improving its role in providing both weather and climate information to the public?
How does eliminating all references to non white, women, or disabled people in government agencies serve the country?
How does firing hundreds of FAA staff make flying safer?
The US IRS is the biggest government revenue generator and profit center in the world. How will firing thousands of those workers improve that work when it is less able to collect taxes? It is the single most efficient department in the government in terms of dollars spent and dollars earned.

Hypothetical saving on paper does not amount to efficiency.
 
DOGE savings are undocumented and being rolled back due to violating checks and balances

What business does the government have nosing around in sports?

Until refinary capacity is built out, no amount of opening drilling is going to cause drilling to increase. Plus, if you cut energy prices too much, it will be unprofitable to drill in the U.S. and it will cut back on employment or hours worked in the energy sector

Neither was ignored by Biden, but good luck with those FEMA cuts

How is our government more efficient? Spending tens of millions to send President Musk's buddy to sporting events?

There's no violation of checks and balances. DOGE has its own oversight subcommittee in Congress, and they have no problem with Elon's activities.

What business does the government have doing anything? It's because the people invest their power to the government to get things done, and the government acts based on the will of the people. There was wide support for reform among conservatives regarding transgender participation in sports.

You know we can export oil, we don't have to process or use it all ourselves.

How can you say neither was ignored? Have you seen the videos of JD Vance going to those areas and getting a heroes welcome?

And our government is more efficient because we've cut $55 billion and not lost any services.
 
Oh and do you know why Musk/Trump is doing all this "cost cutting"? They need the money to reduce the taxes on the richest Americans when budgets are discussed in the House and Senate.
 
Oh and do you know why Musk/Trump is doing all this "cost cutting"? They need the money to reduce the taxes on the richest Americans when budgets are discussed in the House and Senate.

Actually they need the money to enact no tax on tips, no tax on overtime, and no tax on social security. In fact no tax on tips is such a brilliant idea that Kamala tried to steal the idea.
 
Well, if you weren't making a point about American foreign policy consistency across multiple administrations, and instead are referring specifically to European braying... I guess I'm disappointed.

The rules-based international order was always based on certain collectively-agreed-upon hypocrisies. I've written about the one that touches on the matter of Gaddafi elsewhere: the division between the civilized world, where the typical tools of Great Power realpolitik are considered to be in poor taste, and the colonial world, where everything the Nazis did and more is acceptable and it all happens strictly in the passive voice. This is what allows Europe to watch Gaddafi get ganked (passive voice, see?) with approval.
Things are different now. The accord, as you might put it, is under strain. Trump's actions have already directly raised the possibility that Europeans may now be treated the same way that Gaddafi was. This is unacceptable to them in a way that Gaddafi's abrupt exit was not. The hypocrisy of this is not the point here.
 
Fair enough to the nature of your point.

It's still disappointing. Europe is not the world nor are its approximations of what savages are outside moral consideration.
 
the division between the civilized world, where the typical tools of Great Power realpolitik are considered to be in poor taste, and the colonial world, where everything the Nazis did and more is acceptable and it all happens strictly in the passive voice.
I don't love the narrative you're weaving here.

Was it a distaste for the tools, or an adaptation to the real possibility of escalation with an ideologically very opposed and nuclear armed power bloc?
 

Acting social security head steps down, reportedly over Doge's access to data​

The acting head of the Social Security Administration has stepped down from her role.

Michelle King was named acting commissioner for Social Security just last month, after working for the agency for more than three decades.

A Trump administration official told the BBC's US partner CBS News that King had been replaced by Leland Dudek, who previously led the agency's fraud investigation office. Dudek apparently replaced King before King stepped down.

The president of the advocacy group Social Security Works, Nancy Altman, told CBS that Doge employees had been trying to gain access to a database containing sensitive social security information - and that King had been resistant to allowing them access.

"She was standing in the way and they moved her out of the way," Altman said.

King's departure is the latest of several high-ranking officials concerned about requests from Elon Musk's Department of Government Efficiency (Doge).
https://www.bbc.com/news/live/c9vmzvz9ez0t
 

Acting social security head steps down, reportedly over Doge's access to data​

The acting head of the Social Security Administration has stepped down from her role.

Michelle King was named acting commissioner for Social Security just last month, after working for the agency for more than three decades.

A Trump administration official told the BBC's US partner CBS News that King had been replaced by Leland Dudek, who previously led the agency's fraud investigation office. Dudek apparently replaced King before King stepped down.

The president of the advocacy group Social Security Works, Nancy Altman, told CBS that Doge employees had been trying to gain access to a database containing sensitive social security information - and that King had been resistant to allowing them access.

"She was standing in the way and they moved her out of the way," Altman said.

King's departure is the latest of several high-ranking officials concerned about requests from Elon Musk's Department of Government Efficiency (Doge).
https://www.bbc.com/news/live/c9vmzvz9ez0t

Well she can join the USAID people. I don't know who these entrenched lifetime government bureaucrats think they are, that they somehow can defy the president, but they are quickly finding themselves unemployed.
 
Fair enough to the nature of your point.

It's still disappointing. Europe is not the world nor are its approximations of what savages are outside moral consideration.

Of course Europe is not the world. But Europe is key to the US' global alliance system even as we try to reorient toward countering China. Admittedly, the states closer to China will have a somewhat harder choice to make

Was it a distaste for the tools, or an adaptation to the real possibility of escalation with an ideologically very opposed and nuclear armed power bloc?

The conceptual division of the world that I'm referring to existed about a century before the Soviet Union did. Its antecedents reach all the way back to, like, the Treaty of Tordesillas and to the medieval concept of Christendom.
 

US government tries to rehire nuclear staff it fired days ago​

The US government is trying to rehire nuclear safety employees it had fired on Thursday, after concerns grew that their dismissal could jeopardise national security, US media reported.

The National Nuclear Security Administration (NNSA) workers were among hundreds of employees in the energy department who received termination letters.

The department is responsible for designing, building and overseeing the US nuclear weapons stockpile.

The terminations are part of a massive effort by President Donald Trump to slash the ranks of the federal workforce, a project he began on his first day in office, less than a month ago.

US media reported that more than 300 NNSA staff were let go, citing sources with knowledge of the matter.

That number was disputed by a spokesperson for the Department of Energy, who told CNN that "less than 50 people" were dismissed from NNSA.

The Thursday layoffs included staff stationed at facilities where weapons are built, according to CNN.

The Trump administration has since tried to reverse their terminations, according to media outlets, but has reportedly struggled to reach the people that were fired after they were locked out of their federal email accounts.
https://www.bbc.com/news/live/c9vmzvz9ez0t
 

US government tries to rehire nuclear staff it fired days ago​

The US government is trying to rehire nuclear safety employees it had fired on Thursday, after concerns grew that their dismissal could jeopardise national security, US media reported.

The National Nuclear Security Administration (NNSA) workers were among hundreds of employees in the energy department who received termination letters.

The department is responsible for designing, building and overseeing the US nuclear weapons stockpile.

The terminations are part of a massive effort by President Donald Trump to slash the ranks of the federal workforce, a project he began on his first day in office, less than a month ago.

US media reported that more than 300 NNSA staff were let go, citing sources with knowledge of the matter.

That number was disputed by a spokesperson for the Department of Energy, who told CNN that "less than 50 people" were dismissed from NNSA.

The Thursday layoffs included staff stationed at facilities where weapons are built, according to CNN.

The Trump administration has since tried to reverse their terminations, according to media outlets, but has reportedly struggled to reach the people that were fired after they were locked out of their federal email accounts.
https://www.bbc.com/news/live/c9vmzvz9ez0t
Some of those folks are going to demand big raises to come back once they realize the government is desperate to rehire them...

Or they will just sell their knowledge to foreign adversaries, since the government has apparently lost track of them :crazyeye:
 
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The conceptual division of the world that I'm referring to existed about a century before the Soviet Union did. Its antecedents reach all the way back to, like, the Treaty of Tordesillas and to the medieval concept of Christendom.
I don't disagree with this entirely, I'm just kinda surprised you are claiming some of our cultural inheritance may stretch back really really far. No way.

To the extent I disagree, I think the left-right struggle 1910-1945ish had already broken that consensus. The new one is more simply about reducing risk of escalation.
 

Trump's musings on 'very large faucet' in Canada part of looming water crisis, say researchers​

Aging infrastructure and changing climate could put pressure on long-standing treaties

Water sharing between Canada and the United States has long been a contentious issue.

In 2005, former Alberta premier Peter Lougheed warned against sharing Canada's water supply with the United States, suggesting Alberta's most important resource was water, not oil and gas.

"We should communicate to the United States very quickly how firm we are about it," Lougheed said.

Lougheed's concern didn't emerge in a vacuum. It came in the context of a long history of water-sharing proposals, some more radical than others.

Take the North American Water and Power Alliance (NAWAPA), a massive, abandoned engineering megaproject that aimed to "replumb" the continent, diverting water from rivers in Alaska through Canada to the United States in northern Montana through the Rocky Mountain Trench.

Those proposals come and go, even if some researchers see NAWAPA as something of a "zombie" project, always resurfacing, never dead. The actual history of water-sharing between the U.S. and Canada has been much less dramatic — orderly and bureaucratic, managed through institutions, boards and treaties.

So when Donald Trump, as the Republican presidential nominee, made comments in September 2024 about there being a "very large faucet" that could be turned on to drain water from Canada to help with American water shortages, the ears of Canadian hydrologists perked up.

"There's a bit of an inflammatory nature to it," said Prof. Tricia Stadnyk, a Canada Research Chair in hydrologic modelling with the University of Calgary's Schulich School of Engineering.

"However, I think there's a demonstrated history of him being … maybe the right word is 'interested' over Canada's water."

For water experts, there's worry that climate change and shifting U.S. policies could put pressure on long-standing cross-border water agreements.

And century-old infrastructure isn't helping matters.

Take, for instance, failed siphons in Montana, where water is diverted from the St. Mary River through northern Montana and across southern Alberta, supplying essential water for some Canadian agricultural operators and an Alberta community near the border. Repairs on those siphons are now facing a U.S. federal funding pause under an executive order.

John Pomeroy, a University of Saskatchewan water scientist, said he's very concerned about where this issue is heading for three reasons.

First, water management regimes in North America are not fulfilling the requirements they need for sustainable water supply and management for ecosystems and people, he said.

"Second, rapid climate change, which is bringing greater extremes of drought and floods and loss of snow and glaciers in high mountains, is changing the basic calculus on which we base our water management," Pomeroy said.

"Third, the idea of conflict, that one country can take another country's water resources and divert arbitrarily for its own means.…

"We're breaking down a century of co-operation to solve these problems. When those three come together, then you can see the ingredients for a continental disaster."

Turning on the taps​

The issue has always represented a political, economic and environmental challenge, said Peter Gleick, a climate scientist and co-founder of the Pacific Institute, a California research organization that focuses on water.

"The new administration has laid down several challenges associated with U.S.-Canada relationships, tariffs, all sorts of challenges that are a little bizarre," Gleick said.

"So far as I know, water has not yet entered into the conversation on the U.S. side … but who knows what strange ideas might come out of Washington now that he's back in power."

Trump has a "strange fascination" with water, in Gleick's view, that goes well beyond outsized faucets and valves, including his long fascination with California water politics.

In the wake of the recent Los Angeles wildfires, Trump blamed California Gov. Gavin Newsom for the blazes' escalation, telling the American cable news outlet Newsmax that during his first administration, he had "demanded" the governor accept "the water coming from the north."

"From way up in Canada, and you know, the north. It flows down right through Los Angeles… Massive amounts coming out from the mountains, from the melts," Trump said in January. "And even without it, even during the summer, it's a natural flow of water. They would have had so much water they wouldn't have known what to do with it. You would have never had the fires."

The idea that water could be diverted from Canada down to Los Angeles is technically very expensive and would be very difficult to engineer, Pomeroy said. There's also large issues with invasive species and habitats along the way.

"I think with Trump, you see these wild speculations, but they reflect a broader appreciation that the U.S. is ... short of water in many regions, including the southwest, and is approaching a water crisis in the southern Great Plains," Pomeroy said.

"At the same time, climate change is continuing to warm up Canada faster than the rest of the world. And our summers are becoming drier, and that will impose severe water management constraints, just on managing our own water resources."

Turning on a "very large faucet" isn't so simple. And some, including Gleick, don't see water being put on the table in trade negotiations.

There have been tensions simmering for years over water, but joint agreements have long ensured both countries manage water fairly and avoid problems, he said.

To be sure, those commissions have their work cut out for them.

The wild card? That Trump gets it into his head that he really wants Canadian water, Gleick said.

"Then, it becomes a political issue. And then the question is, how is that managed?" he said.

Cross-border co-operation​

Alberta has a case study in cross-border water relations ongoing right now.

Last summer, two century-old siphons located east of Glacier National Park near the Canada-U.S. border burst. Those siphons were a critical component of the Milk River Project, which diverts water from the St. Mary River through northern Montana and across southern Alberta.

This diversion traces its history to the 1909 Boundary Water Treaty between Canada and the United States, and under it, the U.S. is bound to send water to Canada.

Given the natural flow of the Milk River being reduced, the town of Milk River, Alta., situated near the U.S.-Canada border, was forced to prohibit all non-essential water use. At the time, the mayor of the small community called it a "dry town — literally."

Repair work on those siphons is ongoing, though recently hit a roadblock due to an "Unleashing American Energy" executive order issued by the Trump administration.

Jennifer Patrick, project manager of the Milk River Joint Board of Control, said repairs are still ongoing thanks to a loan from the state of Montana, but federal money has been frozen due to the executive order.

Patrick said she believes the pause is part of a broad evaluation of U.S. government spending across multiple infrastructure projects. Other regional water projects, which provide drinking water to rural areas, are also caught up in the review.

"Our funding is caught up in that, but we're pretty confident still that the Department of Interior will put it through a review process and look at how we're spending the money," Patrick said. "It's a good project."

The infrastructure is important to farmers on both sides of the border, and the Alberta government says it has been in close contact with the town of Milk River, water co-ops and agricultural operators to help support them in any way possible.

During a recent interview with Alberta Finance Minister Nate Horner on the Calgary Eyeopener, Horner discussed investment opportunities and strategic advantages that could be seized by a new Crown corporation that would oversee policy for the Heritage Fund, Alberta's rainy day fund.

"I try to think about things that are important to us going forward into the coming decades," Horner said.

"I think about … the water challenges in the state south of us, our opportunities with fresh water, freshwater infrastructure, things like that."

His office later clarified that water infrastructure is not an active investment policy. However, the newly formed, arm's-length Heritage Fund Opportunities Corporation could consider directing investment in areas of water infrastructure should it so choose, a spokesperson said.

Still, the repair will be closely watched by Canadians whose livelihoods rely on it. And it's emblematic for some Canadian water researchers about the importance of being aware that aging infrastructure and shifting climate pressures could put pressure on long-standing treaties.

"None of these treaties are really immune from being reopened and discussed under these very dynamic times, where water supplies are changing due to flood and drought, and also that the infrastructure that was put in to manage a lot of the diversions or allocations is aging," said Stadnyk, the Canada Research Chair in hydrologic modelling.

With climate change making Canada warmer and drier, managing water is becoming even more difficult. Pomeroy, the University of Saskatchewan water scientist, said as glaciers shrink and water demands grow, Canada must take a stronger role in tracking and managing its water, especially as U.S. pressure for access isn't going away — regardless of who is in power.

"It's going to be a tremendous challenge going forward … we have to hold firm on water, that Canadian water stays in Canada," he said.
https://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/calgary/donald-trump-water-canada-peter-lougheed-1.7459583
 
so why was this happening? i don't think it's that complicated. i think he's using the munich security conference to garner a televised reaction that can make the rounds among american constituents and fire up afd. because those are the boxes he's ticking
I think the speech was mostly made to boost Vance's own profile moreso than AFD. He is probably delighted if that is a side effect, but I think it was mostly about his own internal domestic positioning within MAGA.

In the speech, Vance said things he really believes, but I think the point was to demonstrate to party chiefs and big donors alike that he is capable of rousing the rabble. There is no clear successor, no 2nd man in MAGA. The ambitious Vance would love to be that man, but to do so, he really has to demonstrate combative culture warrior tendencies and this venue was likely amongst the highest profile opportunities he's gonna have to do that.
 
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Well she can join the USAID people. I don't know who these entrenched lifetime government bureaucrats think they are, that they somehow can defy the president, but they are quickly finding themselves unemployed.
"Sir, please don't slam your dick in a car door."
"How dare you defy me!"

You are the sort of person who would watch the Crook sit on his balls say "Masterful gambit, sir!"
 

Trump admin wins court victory after federal judge declines to block Musk​

As we've been focused on Donald Trump's comments from Mar-a-Lago in Florida, we've had some other news we can now bring you: A federal judge in Washington DC has declined to block Elon Musk and his associates from accessing data at seven federal agencies, Reuters reported.

It marks a win for the Trump administration and Musk.

A coalition of 14 Democratic state attorneys general sought to bar Musk, who is overseeing the so-called Department of Government Efficiency, or Doge, from accessing information at federal agencies via computer systems.

They also sought to limit Musk from directing firings of government works amid legal cases.

But Tanya S. Chutkan denied their request, saying that the states had not proven why they should receive a temporary restraining order on Musk's actions, Reuters reported.

Chutkan is the same judge who was appointed to oversee the federal 2020 election interference criminal case against Trump. Special counsel Jack Smith dropped all charges against the now-president after Trump won the 2024 presidential election.

Trump nominates Jan 6 activist to serve as top DC prosecutor​

An activist who defended the 6 January 2021 Capitol riot at the US Capitol has been nominated by President Donald Trump to serve as the permanent top federal prosecutor for the District of Columbia, where the nation's capital of Washington is located.

He is currently in the position on an interim basis, and his official appointment must be confirmed by the US Senate.

Martin has previously been listed as a lawyer for at least three Capitol riot defendants, and says he was part of the crowds that gathered near the White House on that day.

Nearly every defendant convicted or facing charges in Capitol riot cases were pardoned by Trump on his first day back in office last month.

In a post on his Truth Social platform, Trump says: "Since Inauguration Day, Ed has been doing a great job as Interim US Attorney, fighting tirelessly to restore Law and Order, and make our Nation’s Capital Safe and Beautiful Again. He will get the job done."

The latest on federal job cuts​

Trump's sacking of US government workers continued on Tuesday. Last week federal employees who handle nuclear weapons were fired, then quickly rehired.

  • The US Department of Agriculture said on Tuesday it had accidentally fired workers responsible for tracking the bird flu outbreak, and was working swiftly to reverse the move
  • Thousands of employees who work in National Parks and in National Forests have been fired, raising questions over whether these wild spaces can be adequately managed
  • The John F Kennedy Presidential Library and Museum in Boston has closed due to a lack of staffing amid recent firings
  • More than 10% of workers at the National Science Foundation have reportedly been laid off
  • A union representing federal workers, the AFGE, condemned the "mass firing spree" and accused Trump of "a radical agenda that prioritises cronyism over competence"
https://www.bbc.com/news/live/c9vmzvz9ez0t
 
mapswire-world-political-white-equal_earth.png


The new world order under Trump.

More lesser nations have not been color coded.
 
What do the colours represent?
 
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