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Protect the Vote's avatar

The Nazi Republican’s Big Lie: Cost Of DOGE

The world’s wealthiest Muskrat, thanks to US government contracts, got on stage with another malignant narcissist and lied to the American people that he was going to make the government efficient and streamline it’s function thereby saving the American taxpayer $2T, later revised downwards to $1T. Like the Cheeto lies, this Muskrat lie never came to be and as a matter of fact cost WE the People dearly.

It’s now estimated that the savings that the racist and apartheid supporter cost the American taxpayer $11-15B due to DOGE activities and cuts to governmental agencies. OBM head Voight, "We want the bureaucrats to be traumatically affected. When they wake up in the morning, we want them to not want to go to work because they are increasingly viewed as the villains. We want their funding to be shut down..."

Government agencies have had to rehire people back and worse yet even though federal workers wanted to return they were paid but not allowed to return. This became spendthrift Cheeto mismanagement at its worse. No wonder he bankrupted 5 companies and he will more than likely bankrupt the federal government on his way out the door due to his taxcuts for the wealthy.

And the above losses don’t account for the $220B loss in tax revenue due to the firing of 28% of IRS employees. Never has it been more clear that a vote for a wealthy Nazi bigoted racist Republican at any level in government is a major mistake.

Francine Koski's avatar

It’s a terrible situation the trump(a convicted felon, and a main perpetrator in the crime ! He is in a prime suspect and in the perfect position to block the information.

I’m so sorry 😢 for your pain and suffering. I hope that the files will be exposed by a different source. Truly 💔

johanna hays's avatar

Lindsay was a true Southern Gentleman—capable of small niceties, but totally untrustworthy on significant issues.

RICHMOND DOCTOR's avatar

Could you be a billionaire?

You would wake up tomorrow with 20 billion dollars in your bank account. That is 20 billion dollars. What would your day be like? Would you try to increase your wealth? If you were in your 70s, who would you leave your 20 billion to? Could you not notice those around you who need assistance? Could you do that? Could you not realize the discrepancy between you and them? How would you make friends? Where could you go without seeing those around you who are living on a limited, fixed income? Think about it. You could eat lobster, oysters, and filet mignon every day, and you would never worry about income. Your 20 billion would earn one billion dollars a year. That is a billion dollars.

Could you, like other billionaires, disregard the world around you? Could you? I know I could not. I worked to earn a reasonable income as a therapist, and I enjoyed living as a socially conscious person who cared about my neighbors, our environment, and others in this world. I remember once, when I was on vacation at Nantucket, a young man who was a psychiatrist living in a cottage next to ours seemed suddenly depressed, and I asked if I could help. He said that he had worked hard to get into medical school, then through his residency in psychiatry, and then organized his life to establish his practice as a psychiatrist. He was happy and enjoyed what he had accomplished and where he was in his life. But yesterday, he received a letter from his wealthy father saying he had sent 20 million dollars to his bank as part of his inheritance, and this made him feel as if his life had been ruined. His father had made him a millionaire and taken away his life's orientation.

I would feel the same way he did if I were to inherit 20 billion dollars. I like being who I am, and I am not, and never would be, a billionaire. I would use my money to benefit those less fortunate than me; I would fund research for children's care, colleges in areas without them, and universal health care. I would want to keep enough to retire when I am ready, and I would find other ways to disperse the 20 billion dollars. I, for one, could not live as a billionaire. This is not me. Back in the early ’70s, I was the director of the summer Head Start program in Nassau County, New York. This was a great program that I would permanently fund for the next 20 years. We provided breakfast and lunch for preschool students and specialized classes to enhance their learning. This program turned me on and fed my soul. Sitting on my yacht, touring the world, would last about a year, and then I would want to be back to who I am.

Byron Hopewell's avatar

Organize a huge wade in at the reflecting pool!