We are the builders

18 hours ago (wethebuilders.org)

DOGE isn't about efficiency, it is about removing checks and balances. Those are there to prevent malware like the GOP to take over the system.

I hope the people behind the submission get their message across. But you shouldn't have the conversation about efficiency. That is entirely the distraction.

Don't talk me about efficient governance of autocracy. It always ends in burning down the land on which it feasts.

  • > Don't talk me about efficient governance of autocracy.

    Autocracies are not efficient at all. There's corruption everywhere.

    The larger the state, the more opportunities for corruption. Of course, dismantling the fat state will anger many - those who are fed by it. Unfortunately some "false positives" are part of the process. All the rest is poetry.

    • We are so way beyond any reasonable "you gotta break some eggs to make an omelette" arguments, and those are cheap talking points that I could have gotten on fox news that you are mindlessly repeating. You are tossing the baby out with the bathwater destroying all checks and balances as you go. This is the death of reason and nuance. This is how autocracy gets a foot in the door. This is the beginning of the end of democracy. And you're cheering on the autocrats.

      7 replies →

The efficiency comparison is interesting, since it starts relatively evenly but quickly dismisses the value of the DOGE approach. Everyone I know who worked at USDS has been talented and well-meaning, but I can't help but feel they've been hamstrung specifically by

1. Methodical improvements mostly work to improve processes as they are. They don't delete processes that shouldn't exist.

2. Agency "empowerment" often means working with a lot of incumbent teams that are simply not suited to digital work and sinks way too much time/energy into stakeholder management.

USDS has done good work, but could have done a lot more if they were actually empowered.

[1] https://www.wethebuilders.org/posts/a-tale-of-two-effiencies...

  • This is true based on the conversations I’ve had with my USDS friends too, but I’m under no illusion that DOGE will actually empower people to do the right things.

    Like, as someone who is generally fairly process averse, I’ve come to the conclusion that there is a huge middle ground between too much process that hampers getting things done and no process that leads to decisions that either break things, or worse, set disastrous acts in motion because basic checks or conversations with people who have more context didn’t happen.

    I think if there was a good-faith attempt from the DOGE folks to audit and understand certain systems and processes, instead of gleefully dismantling and freezing programs, firing people, gleefully announcing how much money was “saved” (and often with incorrect amounts) and reflexively ripping on how terrible everything is, you’d probably get some cooperation from the people who have had to deal with bullshit bureaucracy. But that isn’t what happened.

    What’s happened is akin to throwing the baby out with the bath water, all real security issues being completely ignored, under the guise that 19 year old crypto bros have the work experience, social skills, or common sense to foresee what is happening.

    Governments are inefficient. That’s as much a feature as it is a bug. But with USDS in particular, you had people who left high paying jobs to work for the government because they wanted to make things better for democracy and the country. That is decidedly not the goal of DOGE employees, who want to out McKinsey McKinsey when it comes to just slashing and burning.

    • Unfortunately nuance is dead. I too wish Musk had tried to empower USDS instead of immediately alienating many of the people best positioned to improve things.

      2 replies →

    • > out McKinsey McKinsey when it comes to just slashing and burning

      That's more of a Bain & Co speciality.

      You bring in Bain to layoff the BUs McKinsey recommended your company build /s (kinda)

  • But DoGE is more like a PE firm that fires a bunch of people. It is less like a careful founder who hand crafts tough microdecisions that make everyone more efficient. DoGE cares about the balance sheet not the operations.

    • Yeah I’d say it is PE crossed with the worst management consultants. The actual health of the programs and the food to humanity doesn’t matter. It’s all about some perceived balance sheet as you say with zero care about the fallout from those decisions.

      It’s easy to be efficient when you’re no longer providing any programs or services.

      1 reply →

  • Are sweeping layoffs without any serious attempt to retain critical talent going to empower the remaining staff to do their best work? We've seen lots of examples of DOGE cutting loose important people and then flailing to hire them back. What happens when that one person who makes the whole team able to do their jobs gets cut loose? Are you empowered and productive then suddenly?

    If DOGE were serious about increasing efficiency they'd be focused on process reforms. Instead they're randomly cancelling contracts, cancelling leases, and letting people go without doing the hard work of analyzing processes or analyzing organizations to figure out where the problems actually are.

    It's like their philosophy is "if we cut one of the dog's legs off it'll suddenly become a more efficient runner".

    • I'm not here to defend DOGE, but you're making the same mistake as the article of assuming the DOGE approach has no merit.

      Deleting processes somewhat randomly, then listening for the pain, is a pretty well-known technique for understanding and cleaning up legacy systems. Of course, it should only be used on systems where (temporary) failures are tolerable.

      There are parts of the government where that is true, and parts where it is dangerous. The problem on both sides is assuming the same techniques should be applied across the entire government, when some services are indeed life-and-death and others absolutely should be deleted.

      15 replies →

    • > It's like their philosophy is "if we cut one of the dog's legs off it'll suddenly become a more efficient runner".

      I think their philosophy is to replace the dog's legs with ones that run (only) where they want it to run.

      4 replies →

  • To me, what's happening in the US now looks very much like the wave of hostile-takeovers that destroyed British industry through the 70s and 80s. Adam Curtis "Mayfair Set" documents it well [0].

    "Efficiency", which is an empty and practically meaningless word if you really examine it [1], was the cause celebre then too. And many of the perpetrators were charismatic and quite loved (Stirling was an archetypal British hero) up until the damage had been done and the trickery exposed.

    [0] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Mayfair_Set

    [1] https://cybershow.uk/blog/posts/efficiency/

They should add Secure Drop support [0] - it's what Bloomberg, NYT, Washington Post, Politico, NOYB, etc use for anonymous tips.

Email runs the risk of de-anonymization, as most people don't know about Proton, and this very much falls close to whistleblowing.

Also, anyone who seriously wishes to say anything should probably NOT respond via IG or even follow the page. If you are whistleblowing, maintaining anonymity is critical.

[0] - https://github.com/freedomofpress

This is interesting but very much lacking in details, it needs exact examples. I really feel for the workers at USDS. I was an engineer during the Elon Twitter acquisition and saw the thoughtless destruction first-hand.

However, the burn-it-all down approach does have some merit that critics of Elon/DOGE never admit to. How do they propose you carefully untangle the knots of fractal bureaucracy at speed and produce results if not by just cutting them off? The previous approaches of a special committee etc. just add a another fractal and yet another process.

Sometimes I feel the critics would be content if nothing was ever accomplished, if nothing ever changed, as long as thoughtful meetings were conducted and stakeholders were consulted. There is a very real layer of inertia that needs to be punched through, velocity has merit all its own.

I am very concerned about the possible outcomes of DOGE overall but business as usual just means the US goes bankrupt slowly with all the correct protocols observed. I am glad the inertia is being punctured.

  • >>>> the knots of fractal bureaucracy

    Just being triggered by this phrase, the ideas that business as usual is unsustainable, and that the bureaucracy is unworkable, are articles of faith.

    • Prolonged deficit spending is by definition not sustainable.

      We have been doing that for about 25 years but can’t continue indefinitely. Especially not with higher interest rates.

      Government has objectively gotten worse despite massive tax revenue and is involved in a lot of endeavors that are well outside its scope IMO.

      As just one of many examples: Just try to build a house pretty much anywhere and you will encounter fractal bureaucracy. This is during a nationwide housing shortage and many societal ills can be directly linked to housing costs!

      Our national debt looks like a hockey-stick: https://fiscaldata.treasury.gov/americas-finance-guide/natio...

      And we spend about as much money on the debt as our entire bloated defense budget!

      4 replies →

  • > I was an engineer during the Elon Twitter acquisition and saw the thoughtless destruction first-hand.

    I don't know. I'm not a fan of Elon, and never really used Twitter. The popular opinion was that firing most of the workforce, Twitter would go down. That it needed god knows how many SREs to keep running.

    Then Elon fired everyone and Twitter didn't go down. What was destroyed?

  • Budgets are defined by the president and approved by congress; both are republicans controled. Why not turn off the tap in the traditional way instead of all this chaos?

    They should be able to tell the departments their budgets getting cut and let the distributed leaders and experts evaluate the detailed logistics of how to manage the resulting budget in their own department. Elon going like by line in the US budget is like my CFO looking at my micro-service’s memory allocation, just seems silly.

    Leaders should be setting high level goals and budgets and those on the ground can make the necessary adjustments to make them match.

I’ve been in government contracts. Been on the teams that built the websites or whatever. It’s always some massive Fortune 500 company with a VP that was college roommates with a politician or went to West Point with a general. Of course when government guys give big congrats they immediately get booked as a very well paid speaker at some useless conference.

  • In defense of this process is the government needs to work with stable companies that are highly likely to be in business in 10-15 years. That rules out a lot of startups.

    Networks matter and trust matters, they should prefer to do business with people they know!

    That doesn't mean there shouldn't be accountability and investigations into cushy speaking gigs. But the government should absolutely work with established companies run by executives they know.

    • The best example I can think of was the healthcare portal. It was given to a company that had no experience over Intuit who had pas performed that included Turbo Tax. The company that won the contract had a board member who was classmates with the First Lady. This is so common it’s not even news. Government tech work is all done by contractors whose connections have nothing to do with past performance or quality.

      1 reply →

  • Would be nice to have anti corruption measures to prevent this kind of decentralized corruption.

    But I don't think dismantling the government and giving the pieces to Musk is the solution to corruption. That just sounds like more centralized corruption.

    • How, exactly, do you excise entrenched corruption smoothly? The corrupt people are going to do everything they can to stop you and protest loudly in the process.

      The current problem is corruption but the real problem is that corruption will always happen when the power is there. The only way to prevent it is to not place the power at that level in the first place.

      Limited power is the only anti-corruption tool that works.

      6 replies →

    • Musk is corruption. He does not want to solve it, he is literally trying to ensure it happens more and without any risk.

“… in practice it's more likely to just end up broken, or so fragile that it breaks later…”

But that’s the entire point. Every time GOP finds anything in the government that’s anywhere near productive, they intentionally destroy it. They can’t be bothered to continue improving it. The government can’t possibly be good at anything so let’s come in and make sure everyone knows that!

Absolutely amazed at how quickly this is dropping on HN. I am not on either side, but man that algo must really not like it.

> There is a fundamental truth motivating the U.S. Digital Service that sets it apart from many other government agencies: You cannot build an app the same way you build a boat.

In my time in government contracting almost nobody understood or wanted to acknowledge this (at least in the Navy). You could practically play bingo with non-technical PMs talking about "increments" and "milestones" on the way to "fielding a complete capability" as though it was a weapons system that'd be stuck in the field for 30 years instead of the CRUD app that it _actually_ was. Any attempt to expediently deploy a thoughtfully-engineered vertical slice to iterate upon was stymied by year-long compliance processes and deployment procedures rooted in the year 2004. The culture is used to building tangible physical products (airplanes) and fails to comprehend that software is just bits and bytes that can be changed at will and automated. Even worse, any attempt to introduce a more sane process resulted in something that strongly resembled the status quo being repackaged and disingenuously branded "Agile" or "SecDevOps" or some other buzzword.

I'm certainly not in the "move fast and break things" npm/Xitter/Google camp but it shouldn't take 18 months to get a web app in front of beta testers. It's a real shame that the USDS is being gutted because I was very impressed with what I saw of their work and think that it's the path forward to cost savings in government software development.

  • I'm not a USDS employee, but I'm a federal contractor working alongside USDS employees, some of which I count as friends, and some of which have been fired. My views are my own, and take them with a grain of salt; I'm kind of an idiot.

    The USDS is wonderful. Unfortunately, there are a couple factors that might have impacted its lifespan. I think the USDS has been a bit quiet about its accomplishments. One reason for that is the common public view of the government agencies as ossified and of government employees as slothful, ineffectual, and arrogant (which has not been my general experience). I think the USDS has been very willing to give its partner agencies the lion's share of the credit in order to assure future cooperation and avoid any public controversy, to refuse to play into that narrative.

    Unfortunately, without a lot of publicity, I think there has been a faintness in the public perception of what the USDS does, and how well it does that.

  • Ages ago I worked at a DoD contractor. I was in a special projects department.

    The overall company was broken up into divisions, essentially the west coast facility was its own division, the midwest, east coast had its own division. They are reasonably independent, with their own facilities, own profit and cost centers, etc.

    What was telling was that they also had a "Data" division. This was a branch that had its own division level autonomy, but was installed in each of the other divisions. The Data division managed the mainframes at the time. If one of the divisions needed computing facilities, they contracted with the Data division. Considering the expense of setting up and maintaining the mainframes of the time, it made sense.

    But that's where my special project group came in.

    We offered internal computing services, without the Data division, for our group. We ran on mini computers and the exploding PC and workstation machines. Our boss had sales reps from everywhere dropping off new gear to evaluate.

    Typically, we've all heard it before, that our group of college level "kids" was much more nimble and responsive to the needs of our group than the Data division ever could be. We were a sunk cost that could be spent on anything rather than bound by contracts and such. Specs were delivered over coffee and recorded on post it notes. Then we'd just get to work and iterate.

    It seems this concept had to be continually reinvented, and rise again, and again, and again, from the ashes. Maybe its a software thing. We all know how it always seems faster to burn the old, reinvent and rewrite the new. How the "best" way to lose technical debt is to `rm -rf /` and start again. "Do it right, this time." -- again, and again.

    You'd like to think there's a middle ground, but I think it's just the institutional nature of the business and the practice. Obviously, nowadays we do have some substantial, long term, long lived systems. But they're more rare than not, they're imperfect and still suffer from issues, new and old, as they evolve.

Not long ago, I looked into joining USDS.

Today, I'd be kicking myself, if I'd moved to DC, only to have this insane rogue invasion of government happen.

Could be interesting once they have content but so far there is nothing there. The “Contact Us” page is a 404.

Lol that logo is so ridiculous and one of the reasons no one in labor takes the left seriously

Only a matter of time until NOAA's data will be inaccessible. It was great while it lasted.

This is an initiative I want to support, but after reading both stories - you're making the mistake of having a good-faith argument with bad faith actors, comparing approaches as if you are chasing the same objective from different principles.

DOGE is not trying to find efficiency. DOGE is trying to funnel money from the people to the powerful. DOGE is actively part of a project to destroy the government. DOGE does not give a damn.

> Follow us on Instagram

When Elon bought twitter, I didn't immediately see the conflict of interest. Now it's clear.

  • Feels like Bluesky would be a good home for an org like this

    • Agreed, that said, if you’re going for fast and wide reach that’s not Twitter, Instagram makes good sense.

  • I get the position that someone in government or in such special advisor or whatever position he has probably shouldn't be able to own a major newspaper, TV channel or major social media platform. I agree to that. But didn't he buy it much earlier? In these cases I guess they could be forced to have someone else run it sort of like a blind trust but I'm not sure how well that works in practice.

    • The trust would have to divest and reinvest everything. Otherwise it’s not blind. Simpler to just have people like that not qualify for office when they have clear conflicts of interest.

    • > But didn't he buy it much earlier?

      Probably around the time when he came up with the idea of registering "United States of America Inc." and "Group America LLC"

    • The neat thing about oligarchy is, none of those decorums matter anymore. The oligarchs just do what they want.

      Trump funneled US taxpayer money (and foreign government money) into Mar-a-Lago his whole first term and still got reelected.

  • when he bought Twitter it was clear (to me at least) that his motivation was he wanted Trump to win the election. That was rather predictable from the timing.

    • Straight up the biggest scam going on is Elon convincing Trump that he won him the election.

      There was an incredible backlash against incumbents across the globe. Trump literally did not need any help from Elon to win.

So Im sure this topic would be contentious in the extreme, but Im legitimately curious about how the HN community is split in regards to DOGE. Seems like a very polarizing topic, and from reading comments I have no idea how the community at large feels.

  • DOGE is not a legal entity that has any authority to do what it is trying to do.

    The cause may have merits but the method we should all agree is illegal and unconstitutional.

    You may not like it but congress needs to make these decisions.

    • And, by definition, DOGE is a massive conflict of interest for Elon.

      You don’t put someone who stands to make billions from reduced regulations on his personal companies in charge of firing said regulators. This is “how to avoid corruption 101.”

      Even if you love doge, there is zero chance Elon exclusively makes decisions that are completely impartial. It’s practically impossible when he can strike fear in any random federal employee, and only hires extremely loyal people. Anyone in that position has so much power.

      As a result, you have to hire people for this position who have no conflicts of interest, and who have a strong track record of thoughtful, data-driven decision making, who invite disagreement, and who try to understand problems before pressing the delete button.

      You cannot tell me with a straight face that Elon is a good fit for this position without divesting from his personal interests.

    • >> DOGE is not a legal entity that has any authority to do what it is trying to do

      100% false.

      DOGE is a legal entity that has authority to do what it is trying to do.

      Specifically, DOGE is the Department of Government Efficiency, which is a legal entity created by your President inside the USDS. The USDS is a government agency created by President Obama as the "United States Digital Service" and renamed by President Trump as the "United States DOGE Service".

      It's authorized. Let's get on with it.

  • HN can't even agree on if Rust is good, very good, insanely good, or overhyped.

    Expecting them to agree on politics is a fool's errand.

  • Giving the richest person on earth unsupervised root access to the only remaining superpower's government, good or bad? I guess we'll never know.

  • To give you an example, DOGE killed the IRS Direct File program that allowed people to avoid using expensive proprietary tax filing software. It's still going to be available for this season, but likely not after.

    And this is literally an example of government efficiency, a simple cost-effective solution that benefits actual people. The kind of things that DOGE is supposed to supercharge.

  • I applaud the idea of DOGE - we have this issue in government where once you create something (a process, organization, law, etc.), it's exceedingly difficult to get rid of it. That's really bad! Even if something proves to be obviously very stupid once it's implemented, it stays around forever and creates an ongoing tax on society.

    California's Prop 65 is the perfect example of this. It seemed like a good idea at the time (put a label on anything that could cause cancer), but it turns out when implemented that you have to label so many things that people just completely ignore it. Businesses are still required to put on these labels that serve absolutely no purpose, though. It should be deleted, but we'll probably be stuck with it forever.

    At the federal level, I'm incredibly supportive of killing NEPA. Good idea, but in the end more detrimental to the environment (by slowing/blocking/increasing the cost of good projects) than helpful to it. Ideally they'd take the lessons learned from what went wrong and craft something better, but given the choice between keeping NEPA and killing it, I think killing it is right.

    That said, DOGE's execution has been very poor. Just look at the people they've fired (nuclear safety, people actively working on the bird flu epidemic, etc.) and then rehired. That is clearly incompetent execution.

    Also, Musk's approach of cut, cut, cut and then add back when you realize you cut too much clearly has problems when applied to government. Cutting all the various science funding meant that research had to be stopped, and even if it's restarted later, there will be damage from stopping that can't be recovered.

    So yeah, as with all things from this administration I am attempting to think positively (largely for my own mental health). There is probably tremendous value to getting rid of a lot of the bureaucracy that has built up over the last 250 years, and I greatly hope that value exceeds the damage that's done with the ham-fisted execution.

    • It's illegal, it doesn't matter if you think it's a good idea.

      The executive branch cannot "kill NEPA". It's a law. Congress has to repeal it. Vote for congressional candidates who support your position.

      Laws exist for a reason. It's incredibly dispiriting that so many people seem not to understand or care about the division of power made absolutely clear in the Constitution.

      5 replies →

    •   There is probably tremendous value to getting rid of a lot of the bureaucracy that has built up over the last 250 years.
      

      Only when you have competent and highly qualified people making the decisions at lower levels. If those people are fired and/or swayed to avoid government jobs then you just end up with incompetence with no oversight.

      This whole operation is to dismantle government programs so corporations can swoop in and fill the void.

      1 reply →

  • DOGE = Curtis Yarvin's RAGE from his butterfly revolution blog post. Curtis Yarvin is socially relevant to Peter Thiel, Elon Musk, and Marc Andreessen among others in the tech world.

    I'd implore readers to catch up what Yarvin's ideals are because it helps frame what's happening and the ultimate goal in plain terms rather than making us work backwards divine intentions from the news.

    • “DOGE = Curtis Yarvin's RAGE from his butterfly revolution blog post.”

      I rarely have the patience or temperament to read Yarvin, so I can’t say whether you are right or not. But I can say that his critique of progressive institutions has resonated with a much larger share of the right than his positive vision of politics.

      And this makes sense! It’s entirely possible to have insight into the problems your side is facing while being off base about the solutions. That’s pretty common to intelligent, eccentric thinkers across the political spectrum.

    • Do you have an archive or something of his blog post? It seems he paywalled it.

  • I'm honestly baffled by how there's even a debate. A private citizen and his geek squad accessing and interfering with government systems regardless to what end or for what reason, because he donated a quarter of a billion to an election is banana republic stuff.

    It shouldn't even be a politized topic in the sense that the consensus in a democratic Republic should be that private entities cannot usurp the institutions of the state.

  • It's certainly polarizing, the quality of discourse on Hacker News has plummeted in the past few weeks.

    • I agree with you, many of these discussions take a very strong us vs them turn very quickly, even here on HN where it's usually better than elsewhere. Perhaps this shift is easier to notice when you don't directly have a horse in the race? But then again, US politics affects pretty much every country to some extent.

  • Regardless of how anyone feels about it, it's factually accurate to state that it's illegal. The executive branch cannot abrogate Congress's constitutional role. The president is a citizen, not a king.

    It's also unnecessary. This rushing to the endgame is extremely counterproductive if you support their goals. They have both houses of Congress, both of which are filled to the brim with eager knuckle-draggers. They can pass anything they want through actual legislation, and it would be a lot harder to undo in the future if they did.

    At this rate, even this Congress is going to have to push back hard to preserve their own jobs.

  • To anyone who supports this: if Harris had won and brought in Bill Gates and George Soros and gave them root on the entire US government with dubious to nonexistent congressional approval, would that be legal and appropriate?

    (For the record IMHO it would not be okay.)

  • There is no single HN community, so you're asking for a bit much.

    I am afraid having a civil discussion about this is not going to very likely at the moment.

  • My $0.02:

    DOGE is one of those things where the stated concept sounds good, but is almost impossible to pull off in a hurry, and the way they're going about it looks very disingenuous.

    It's suspicious of the highest order that DOGE is prioritising programs and agencies that Musk personally ideologically opposes. He has had a falling out with a trans daughter that no longer speaks to him, and he's had personal issues with DEI because he would much prefer to hire white men than be "told" that that is racist and sexist by outsiders.

    Allowing billionaires to be in charge of the government is insane when its the government's job to keep them in check. It's like letting criminals run the police department.

    Of course, the guy with the $2M Lamborghini is going to get rid of all speed cameras the instant they get to be the head of the department of transportation! Of course they're going to go on TV and justify their self-interest with some bullshit made-up story about speed cameras.

    Look.

    You can make a legitimate argument that speed cameras are merely a revenue-collection device and not a safety device. You can make arguments that speed cameras in some locations can increase accidents because drivers look at the speedometer more than the road. You can do studies, run A/B experiments with and without speed cameras, etc...

    But if the repeat-offender caught doing 150 in a 60 zone that has racked up tens of thousands in fines they haven't paid bribes their way into power and immediately fires everyone in the fine collection agency and the speed camera maintenance department, it can't be thought of as anything other than naked self-interest. It's doubly suspicious if they have no plan to replace the lost revenue, they just want to get rid of the cameras, and then... there's no "and then".

    In the case of DOGE and Trump's general policy, it looks an awful lot like a bunch of very right-wing politicians have been itching to use states' rights to enforce their Christian vision for America, but have been blocked by federal government agencies. They now have their chance to gut those agencies so that they can ban abortion, teach "Christian values" in their public schools, and put women and gays back in their place. Add to that some capitalists that can finally get rid of the EPA, OSHA, and the like so that they can profit in peace, unbothered by pesky little matters such as the environment and workers limbs not being cut off on a regular basis.

    • The problem, in the court of public opinion, is that the people that don't like the speed cameras vote more than the people that like them, so while DoGE goes around defunding programs that will lead to people dying, the fact that King Trump brought back plastic straws is going to matter far more to them than the cruelty inflicted on downtrodden.

      If they didn't want to be downtrodden, they should have chosen better parents.

  • [flagged]

    • Genuinely curious what makes you see those sets as disjoint? YMMV but as an older person I've always associated socially and politically advanced thinking with the mindset of the "original" pioneers in tech. Shallow money-grubbing, fame obsession, fragile egos... that archetype came much later.

      4 replies →

  • Because HN is a software-focused social site. Software developers have always loved Elon because Randroids and Libertarians are over-represented here.

    • I think there is just more viewpoints tolerated here as long as they're not clearly inflammatory, at least when you compare it against other social media websites like reddit. It might seem over-represented since a lot of viewpoints are suppressed elsewhere.

How long will this stay up?

  • It's not an official government website. The TLD is .org, not .gov, so there's not really anything they can do to take it down (short of legal action).

    • I think OP means stay up on HN, the controversy catcher will probably be triggered by comments / flags soon.

[flagged]

  • Got examples of fraud and waste DOGE got rid of to cite? Like, actual examples? I've been paying attention and I haven't seen anything vetted and verified yet, but I've seen lots of examples of them firing critical people - like from that one nuclear management agency, or the bird flu people they're trying to hire back - or cancelling contracts that are actually needed, like canning a Thomson Reuters Westlaw deal because they hate Reuters [1]. Or misreading a $8m deal and calling it 8 billion dollars of fraud/waste because they (or the AI they're using) can't count zeroes or tell the difference between a decimal point and a comma [2]...

    At this rate they're going to need to find a whole lot of fraud and waste to make up for the havoc they've created.

    EDIT: Added a couple links for the harder to find examples.

    1: https://bsky.app/profile/bradheath.bsky.social/post/3lijt5eh...

    2: https://www.cnn.com/2025/02/19/politics/doge-canceled-contra...

[flagged]

  • Your experience is irrelevant if you make nonsensical points.

    No one has been working on the USDS for a long time. It was created in 2014 to _improve archaic systems_. That was its mandate, and it came from the top.

    Elon's not doing anything special or respectable. Decisive action and moronic flailing are not mutually exclusive.

    And I'm not an expert, and maybe you're not in England, but NHS England has supported online appointment booking for about a decade. Can't imagine it's that different elsewhere in the UK based on a quick search.

    https://www.england.nhs.uk/gp-online-services/about-the-prog...

    • Not only was it created in 2014, but it allows for a max of a 4 year tour. You know to keep bringing in fresh outsiders like the parent comment wanted.

  • > Obviously there were techy people in the NHS that knew that, but nobody was asking them.

    Obviously someone did since there was "Choose and Book"[0] which was supposed to be live in 2005[1]. But, as anyone could have predicted, farming the contract out to consultants did not (and has continued to not!) work.

    Also pharmacists were calling for themselves being able to electronically book GP appointments for (patients? customers?)[2]

    An ICO report[3] also implies there were plans for online appointment bookings in 2006.

    [0] Ok, not strictly GP appointments but NHS appointments nonetheless.

    [1] https://www.digitalhealth.net/2005/01/e-booking-to-miss-its-...

    [2] https://www.digitalhealth.net/2005/12/pharmacists-call-for-g...

    [3] https://ico.org.uk/media/about-the-ico/documents/1042390/sur...

  • I hate to break it to, but this administration is not out to “fix all the obviously archaic systems in government” - they are there to destroy it.

    Think stripping out the copper wiring rather than doing a remodeling.

  • > I booked my first doctors appointment online this week.. blah blah blah stupid selfish rant

    You asked yourself how would the system work best for you. Not how would the system work best for everyone. Elderly people make up a large proportion of GP appointments. 20 years ago they weren’t going to be booking anything online. Even today there are many that won’t.

> Follow us on Instagram: @alt_USDS

Are you kidding me? Instagram is part of the tech bro cult that is supporting the authoritarian shift. Why would a tech savvy team make this choice? Crazy.

  • It also happens to be where a lot of regular people are. Unlike whichever turbonerds-only alternative you're likely to suggest.

    This tech savvy team, to their benefit, might also be culture savvy.

  • Seems pretty clear to me.

    The masses aren't on Bluesky, they're on instagram and twitter.

    And while both are owned by "tech bro cult" people, only one is owned by the head of the department you see as a problem.

    Doesn't take a rocket scientist to see the (sound) reasoning here.

  • good way to shoot themselves in the foot. They want people to see this and share where a majority of Americans are.

    purity tests just cede more control to those who don't care about being ethical.