DOGE Has Become What It Claimed To Destroy

from the every-accusation dept

There’s that old saying that every accusation is a confession. Nowhere is this more evident than in the Musk/Trump administration, everything is projection. While claiming to champion free speech and fight government censorship, they’ve become the most aggressively censorial administration in modern history.

After years of performative outrage about campus speech restrictions, they’re systematically dismantling academic freedom.

They’re “rescuing” what they called a terrible Biden economy (which was actually remarkably strong) by… implementing policies that have economists screaming about an inevitable recession (or worse).

But here’s where the projection becomes almost perfectly aligned: DOGE is the deep state. Wired’s Brian Barrett made this crucial observation last week and I can’t get it out of my mind. For all the talk during the last decade of the supposed “deep state” of unelected bureaucrats controlling the government, which was never actually true, DOGE has become the very deep state they falsely claimed existed previously.

The “deep state” is a top-tier conservative bogeyman, right up there with DEI and George Soros. But it seems fair to ask: If a bunch of shadowy, unelected figures, many with shared business interests and connections, took over government functions at the highest levels and directly contravened the will of Congress, what might you call that? How about … DOGE?

After years of alarm over unelected bureaucrats pulling the strings, what better example can you find than this moment the US government is in? DOGE is the thing it claims to fear the most. Elon Musk is the problem he purportedly wants to solve.

Secretive? The so-called Department of Government Efficiency has never provided an org chart, did not have a publicly documented leader until last week, and refused to reveal the identities of its young staffers in early internal meetings. Check.

Unelected? Self-evidently so. Check.

A web of connected interests outside of government? DOGE is inarguably the Elon Musk extended universe. Current and former employees from X, SpaceX, the Boring Company, and Tesla currently control or are deeply embedded in countless government agencies, including the ones they’re ostensibly regulated by. (How many of them? Hard to say exactly, so score another point for “secretive.”)

It goes on. This is more important than just depressingly stupid irony. It’s effectively a peek into their own way of viewing the world and how they will continue to act.

They have no actual governing philosophy beyond power and control. They nihilistically believe that because they would abuse power for personal gain and to silence criticism then everyone else must be willing to do the same. They simply can’t fathom that some people actually go into public service to actually… provide important services to the public.

And, thus, all of the complaints they had all along were never actual complaints. They were revelations about what they think the point of governing is, and why they assumed that anyone in power must be doing what they’re currently doing.

Barrett notes that Musk recently whined about the deep state, while he could have quite clearly been describing himself:

“If there’s not a good feedback loop from the people to the government, and if you have rule of the bureaucrat, if the bureaucracy is in charge, then what meaning does democracy actually have,” Musk said at a recent Oval Office visit. And then, moments later: “We have this unelected, fourth unconstitutional branch of government, which is the bureaucracy, which has, in a lot of ways, currently more power than any elected representative. This is … This is not something that people want, and it does not match the will of the people.”

Sounds bad. Also sounds like DOGE.

To be clear, I’m quite sure that Musk would claim that there is now a “good feedback loop from the people to the government,” but what he means is that people can yell about things he’s doing on his private social media platform X, and because he tweaked the algorithm to flatter his own addled ego, he sometimes responds to deeply unserious superfans, and then tells one of his lackeys to change something in response.

But that’s not actually a feedback loop for the people. It’s a narrow feedback loop of dipshits to a deeply unserious power-hungry whack job who has no intellectual curiosity and no concern for any harm he might cause.

You can’t effectively fight what you can’t properly name. DOGE has emerged as the genuine embodiment of the “deep state” we were warned about — except instead of civic-minded career officials, we now have nihilistic power-mad adrenaline junkies running the show.

This matters because DOGE isn’t just another example of hypocrisy in action — it represents a fundamental threat to the systems and institutions that actually make government work for people.

Of course, DOGE’s defenders claim they’re just “cutting red tape” and “eliminating waste” — as if they discovered government employees whose sole job was to light taxpayer money on fire. In reality, they’re dismantling the systems that protect us from everything from food poisoning to financial collapse.

When you replace expertise with ego and public service with personal enrichment, you don’t just get bad policy — you get the systematic dismantling of the infrastructure that supports innovation, protects civil liberties, and maintains the guardrails that keep power in check. The deep state they imagined never existed. The one they’re building is all too real.

So here we are: the people who spent years warning us about an imaginary deep state have built an actual one. The people who claimed to fear unaccountable bureaucrats have installed literally unaccountable bureaucrats. The people who insisted they would drain the swamp have filled it with their own particularly toxic sludge.

Their accusations weren’t warnings — they were spoilers.

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Comments on “DOGE Has Become What It Claimed To Destroy”

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Koby (profile) says:

The Outsiders

The Deep State consists of career bureaucrats who work to enact their own agenda. DOGE consists of no career bureaucrats, they came from outside government, and they’re brand new; in fact, just the other week, Techdirt was complaining that the young guys brought on board were too new and inexperienced. (The career bureaucrats were just mad that they got owned by a couple of guys fresh out of college.)

David says:

Re:

The Deep State consists of career bureaucrats who work to enact their own agenda. DOGE consists of no career bureaucrats, they came from outside government, and they’re brand new;

If that is supposed to be an advantage, we should let the government be run by Putin-trained personnel.

To be honest, I am not sure we aren’t already getting those.

This comment has been deemed insightful by the community.
Stephen T. Stone (profile) says:

Re:

DOGE consists of no career bureaucrats, they came from outside government, and they’re brand new

You say that as if they have any less of an agenda than the mythical Deep State about which you keep fantasizing. Musk’s agenda is simple: Destroy the federal government, and as many government regulations as possible, to free himself from the burden of having to care about other people besides himself.

This comment has been deemed insightful by the community.
MrWilson (profile) says:

Re:

The Deep State consists of career bureaucrats who work to enact their own agenda.

You state this as you do everything else with the confident ignorance of a person who doesn’t question what they’re told by people they’ve chosen to blindly follow.

You could just as confidently assert that you know for certain that you have to drink the flavor aid because your cult leader told you it was necessary.

You don’t work in government. You don’t work with these supposed deep state bureaucrats. You don’t actually know what they do. You’ve been told a story and you’ve not questioned it. You’re being told another story about DOGE and you’ve not questioned it.

You seriously need to deprogram yourself.

And because politics isn’t a sports game, I’m not saying you should become a blind follower of Democrats or Leftists (which are two different things) either. Just question why you’re so happy to swallow what you’re being fed without stopping to think what’s in it and if maybe you’re the sucker here.

Simping for authoritarians just puts you towards the end of the line for persecution, abuse, and neglect, but you’re still in that line.

This comment has been deemed insightful by the community.
That One Guy (profile) says:

As ever with that lot, 'That's only a problem when MY side isn't doing it!'

Every accusation a confession, every self-given label a rejection of.

Republicans never objected to the idea of unelected bureaucrats with immense power ‘pulling the strings of the government behind the curtain’, their only objection was that those string pullers weren’t explicitly on their side.

This comment has been deemed insightful by the community.
KeillRandor (profile) says:

Deep State...

The whole point about complaining about the ‘Deep State’ by the GOP, is part of the with to undo all progress made during the 20th Century, and revert back to The Spoils System, getting rid of the professional Civil Service. Their complaints are therefore that the Civil Service isn’t corruptible enough for their liking…

Of course, what they really want is to turn the US into the equivalent of the England after the Norman invasion – neo-feudalism.

Arijirija says:

Re:

What it reminds me of are the African states after independence, where the colonial powers had never bothered to build independent civil society institutions, and had always relied on graft and unaccountable colonial control to rule … so consequently, the independent African states had to work all of that out for themselves, with much suffering and loss of life. Trump is a rebirth of Idi Amin or Mobuto Sese Seko, and at the moment we’re not getting the full dictatorship – yet.

KeillRandor (profile) says:

Re: Re:

A lot of people don’t realise that the US has already gone through that entire process form its founding, but actually succeeded in creating a ‘civilized’ society, due to enough immigrants from countries that already had one (e.g. Germany/Netherlands etc.). Again, the GOP (and the type of people that now support it), and now Trump and Musk want to undo all of that progress, because it’s the only thing stopping them from owning the entire country.

That civilization itself has become their enemy, is the entire point.

That One Guy (profile) says:

Re: 'I would engage in voter fraud if given the chance so they MUST be the same!'

I kid you not I recently saw a response to a ‘A quick search of seconds found multiple cases of republican voter fraud’ video of someone claiming that republican voter fraud is justified because they were just doing what (they claimed) the democrats were doing.

This comment has been deemed insightful by the community.
Stephen T. Stone (profile) says:

Re:

I’d nominate “America the Beautiful” or “Lift Every Voice and Sing” as the new anthem. Besides, nobody will ever outperform Whitney Houston’s version of “The Star-Spangled Banner”, so either play that at every sporting event or retire the damn song already.

No name really... says:

Re: Re:

Playing the national anthem at the start of every sporting event is a VERY (US) American thing. Outside of the US, this is seen as really bizarre. but agreed – if you absolutely must play it before a sporting event, then Whitney’s is the only acceptable version.

As for a new national anthem, at least under Trump, have you considered the theme song to the Benny Hill Show?

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