Trump / Musk (other than DOGE) Omnibus Thread

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Trump’s best Cabinet pick might be Li’l Marco.

That says it all.

The Cabinet Secretary nominees are a distraction - especially Hegseth, Kennedy Lite, Tulsi, and Patel; and, Gaetz. Trump AND the Heritage Foundation/Project 2025 HOPE they remain distractions……hell, they hope several (all?) are shot down so that Trump and Heritage can whine about the “Deep State.”

It’s not the Caninet Secretary who will gut departments…….it’s the 10-to-20-to-50 Heritage appointees we ignore while Kennedy Lite pisses us off.

This is NOT Trump playing 3-D Chess; this is Heritage and other right-wingers realizing that Trump is completely a tool……and they can use his ignorance.
 
“… We’re getting clearer indications now that the effort to bamboozle, frighten and entice federal workers into resigning their positions in exchange for non-existent “buy outs” was very much a product of the Elon Musk/DOGE cabal now wilding through and embedding itself within the federal government.

We don’t need a lot of confirmation: they left a slew of meme Easter eggs scattered through the process more or less announcing it.

What’s notable is that the White House is now going out of its way to tell reporters that it definitely wasn’t them. They were, in that well-worn phrase, out of the loop, etc.

I suspect this is true, as far as it goes. But that understates — straight up ignores, really — the degree to which Donald Trump and his top advisors have, entirely by design and intentionally, spun up a series of independent fiefdoms, with Musk’s being the largest, to move fast and break things and push every boundary in the interest of a number of overlapping but distinct ideological agendas. In other words, they probably did “bypass key Trump officials.”

But that’s pretty much the idea when you wind up guys like Elon Musk and Russell Vought with “let’s be legends” gusto and give them the keys.


The news, linked above, that the resignation emails were Team Elon’s idea and didn’t have the okay of the White House comes from a Washington Post article. But we get pretty much the same story in an Ashley Parker article published overnight in The Atlantic, only this time about the across-the-board federal spending freeze and the “memo” that kicked it off Monday. That one was Vought’s team — if not Vought himself, who has yet to be confirmed — at OMB. White House officials told Parker that the memo “was released without going through the usual White House approval processes.”

So the White House is saying they were out of the loop, caught as off guard as everyone else, by the two big conflagrations that have roiled the federal government over the course of this week and led to what is now universally conceded to be a fairly epic face plant little more than a week into the administration. It’s not exonerating. It’s by design.

But I suspect that in this narrow sense it’s true. Because that’s how these folks operate. Trump remains entirely a transactional creature. Ideology, in any articulate sense, is entirely alien to him.

He wants to be loved, which in his mind means total power and total subservience. Amidst the raging bureaucratic storm and planes tumbling out of the sky after two decades-plus of near-perfect safety in U.S. airspace, we learned yesterday afternoon that Trump told Mark Zuckerberg last November that the price of being “brought into the [Trump] tent” was arranging a $25 million bribe in the form of settling a meritless lawsuit from 2020 which had no hope of success. …”

 
Kash Patel at FBI is most dangerous

Trump Administration Shocks Senior F.B.I. Ranks by Moving to Replace Them​

Top officials have been told to retire or be fired in the coming days, fueling fear within an agency that has been a target of President Trump and Kash Patel, his nominee to be F.B.I. director.


“…The steps came as Kash Patel, the president’s nominee to lead the agency, sought to assure lawmakers during a contentious, hourslong Senate confirmation hearing that he would not begin a campaign of retribution or look backward by pursuing perceived rivals. It is unclear whether he was informed of the decisions, which were disclosed on the condition of anonymity to describe personnel matters.

The employees given the apparent ultimatum had been promoted under Christopher A. Wray, who stepped down as F.B.I. director this month.

In an email to colleagues, one of the senior agents said he had learned he would be dismissed “from the rolls of the F.B.I.” as soon as Monday morning.

… F.B.I. directors have more latitude than most agency chiefs in whom they place into senior positions, but they typically do so gradually. Until senators vote on Mr. Patel’s nomination, Brian Driscoll is the bureau’s acting director. …”
 
“… During Mr. Patel’s confirmation hearing, Senator Cory Booker raised the abrupt dismissals of nearly a dozen career prosecutorsat the Justice Department who worked on the criminal investigations into Mr. Trump under the special counsel Jack Smith and whether similar moves would extend to the F.B.I.

“Are you aware of any plans or discussions to punish in any way, including termination, F.B.I. agents or personnel associated with Trump investigations?” asked Mr. Booker, Democrat of New Jersey, after reminding Mr. Patel that he was under oath.

Stating that he had not been involved in the decisions at the Justice Department, Mr. Patel replied, “I am not aware of that, Senator.” …”
 
Ugly and old both times.

Albeit, uglier and older in the 2nd photo.
Time catches up to us all, I just thought the difference was striking in that presser — I suspect he had a professional hair and makeup artist on Inauguration Day 2025, BTW, and now is back to doing it himself (his preference). He looked a lot better for Inauguration 2025 (in part perhaps because it looks like they convinced him to wear a toupee) than he did for the briefing, which is what led me to seek out a photo from inauguration 2017. The sunken cheeks since then is quite striking (even if inevitable for just about everyone pressing 80).

As long as I am shallowly focusing on matters of appearance, the high angle of the camera in the briefing room is not a friend to his diminishing hair up top (still more than most men his age, but something I guarantee he is aware of because he complained about the camera placement the first go round as POTUS).
 
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Federal employees inbox, where you can see the Klipperstein email, and a bunch of others.

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I read about this blunder last night. Way to get the entire Federal Government spammed, Elon & Co.

On a related note:

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“…
A federal source told Straight Arrow News that the emails were suspicious because they were formatted differently than usual mass emails, and they came directly from OPM; normally, departments take messages from OPM and relay them to their employees.

An employee posted in a Reddit thread for federal workers that a new email server was connected to OPM’s servers, which he believed was being used to build lists of all federal employees to generate massive reduction in force (RIF) notices.

A report in FedScoop.com revealed a lawsuit was filed against OPM for the use of the server. The suit said the servers were being used to store information without conducting the required privacy impact assessment.

The two anonymous employees who filed the suit want the government to stop using it until the proper tests have been conducted. ….”

 


A reminder that a major goal of the immigrant bluster by Homan and Trump and others is to induce “self-deportation”.
 

No congressional leader is more at risk of getting caught in the crossfire of Donald Trump’s coming trade wars than Senate Majority Leader John Thune.

Trump said Thursday he’s ready to slap sweeping 25 percent tariffs on Canada and Mexico as soon as Saturday, which will force the South Dakota Republican to decide whether he will use his leadership perch to push back on a tactic that has given him and other agriculture-state GOP lawmakers heartburn or align himself with a burgeoning bloc of MAGA-tinged protectionists in Congress.

Thune knows the stakes all too well: Retaliatory tariffs during Trump’s 2018 trade war with China crippled South Dakota’s agriculture-dependent economy — which relies on the billions of dollars worth of soybeans, corn, beef and other agricultural products it exports abroad every year, plus more in manufactured goods.


Farmers there are still reeling from their losses, and a standoff with Mexico and Canada — which are now American farmers’ two largest export markets — would be devastating. U.S. agricultural exports to Mexico are expected to reach $29.9 billion this fiscal year and a record-high $29.2 billion to Canada, with China further behind, according to the Agriculture Department.

Other farm-state lawmakers and the agriculture industry are quietly counting on Thune to push back against Trump charging into another wave of catastrophic trade wars. But that’s a tall order.
 


WSJ has dedicated a significant amount of effort to getting Trump to back down on tariffs.

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“…
The Federal Reserve’s preferred measure of inflation showed that consumer prices rose 2.4% in November over a year earlier. A 25% tariff on goods from Canada and Mexico would bring the inflation rate up to about 3%, keeping it well above the Fed’s 2% target, according to Capital Economics, an analysis firm.

Additional tariffs on China or others would cause a bigger increase, the firm said.

The Trump administration has played down the risk of inflation and said that higher tariffs would bring more revenue to federal coffers. …”
 
Has Trump ever admitted that tariffs can cause higher prices for Americans? If not, then maybe someone should ask why he won't put tariffs on oil?
 
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