I haven't explored this much yet, but it looks pretty well considered.
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33 sats \ 0 replies \ @Car 7h
It’s funny looking at all these billions spent in these different categories is hysterical. They literally got two of the most pampered founders from Silicon Valley to make cuts to our government. Should have sent in some scrappy Bitcoin founders, they would have closed the gap.
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284 sats \ 2 replies \ @Undisciplined 19h
The descriptive information is well put together. The terrible policy recommendations at the end are terrible. Also, the note at the bottom is just completely wrong. DOGE savings are not one-time savings. In many cases they are finding and cancelling recurring payments and shutting down programs that receive money every year.
One of my problems with pieces like this isn't that they're wrong, but they assume a false dichotomy: Why do DOGE when they could do my brilliant idea instead?
DOGE is silly, if judged by the standard of reducing the national debt. I've been consistently skeptical that it would do much on that front. However, they are finding and exposing lots of ridiculous spending and getting public support for ending a bunch of wasteful (or worse programs).
Judged by something like ROI, DOGE is easily paying for itself in cuts elsewhere, so why are people treating it like a wasted effort? I have my own guesses.
The serious conversation would be something like "DOGE (or something like it) is a worthwhile effort, but it isn't nearly enough to address the unsustainable debt."
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35 sats \ 1 reply \ @sox 8h
Pushing their own ideas is bad but, even if DOGE savings are not one-time savings, it seems that nobody is actually considering that the USA were spending this little to assert their big dominance in the rest of the world.
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64 sats \ 0 replies \ @Undisciplined 5h
That's such a good point.
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0 sats \ 0 replies \ @BlokchainB 16h
Cool website!
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