Re: US Erection 12 *AND* 16 *AND* 20 *AND* 22 *AND* 24 *AND* Beyond
Posted: Sun Feb 16, 2025 3:32 pm
Got it
https://www.canuckscorner.com/forums/
Blob Mckenzie wrote: ↑Sun Feb 16, 2025 3:19 pmIt's odd how many Canadians on this board are more dug in than the average American. They could care less it seems about the country they live in but they want to sit on Uncle Donald's knee and get him to pull a quarter out of their ear. Maybe enjoy a revel and a Roy Rodgers with their leather vests ,ten gallon hats and the dualing cap guns. Maybe a long mustache and a soul(less) patch.
Now Corn is all pissed off and burned out.
I don't think he has any long-term plans or objectives.
Well he's obviously a narcissist, but he didn't get into politics "to enrich himself and his family".5thhorseman wrote: ↑Sun Feb 16, 2025 4:13 pm In the end it's just about his narcissism and enriching himself and his family. Maybe this term he'll start thinking about a legacy but I don't see it yet.
Sure, I'll give him the benefit of the doubt but he's had 4 years already and I don't see anything on the horizon that would qualify as a legacy.Strangelove wrote: ↑Sun Feb 16, 2025 6:11 pmWell he's obviously a narcissist, but he didn't get into politics "to enrich himself and his family".5thhorseman wrote: ↑Sun Feb 16, 2025 4:13 pm In the end it's just about his narcissism and enriching himself and his family. Maybe this term he'll start thinking about a legacy but I don't see it yet.
I think the reason he got into politics was to establish that "legacy" you speak of
... and to make America great again.
And who knows, perhaps he will.
Can't say I'm shocked Horsey.
Well I don't think any of the "right-wingers here" can answer that... yet?5thhorseman wrote: ↑Sun Feb 16, 2025 6:40 pm BREAKING!!!
Learning to live with your freckles is now considered woke?
https://variety.com/2025/film/news/juli ... 0KGMdIVgvw
Are any of the right-wingers here able to explain this one to me?
WOW eh?10 Ways DOGE Hijacked the Deep State—and Why It Can’t Be Stopped
February 14, 2025 5 min read
No, really. Strap in. This one’s wild.
DOGE didn’t come out of nowhere. It wasn’t some rogue hacker collective, nor was it a secret executive order pulled from the depths of the Trump-Musk brain trust. No, DOGE was already there—baked into the system, waiting to be rebranded and unleashed. And once it was, there was no stopping it. Here’s how DOGE flipped the entire bureaucratic order on its head and became Washington’s worst nightmare.
1. It Hijacked an Existing Bureaucratic Monster
Back in 2014, the Obama administration created the United States Digital Service (USDS) to clean up the smoking wreckage of the Obamacare website. The intention? A small, agile IT unit to make sure the government’s digital infrastructure didn’t collapse under its own weight. But like all government projects, it metastasized. USDS didn’t just fix websites—it quietly embedded itself into every major federal agency’s data architecture.
By the time anyone realized how deep its tentacles reached, it was too late. Enter Trump. Enter Musk. Enter DOGE.
2. It Stole the Keys to Every Government Database
Trump didn’t need to create some shady off-the-books operation. The infrastructure was already there. The funding? Locked in. The personnel? In place. All he had to do was rename it. So he took USDS, slapped a new mission on it, and suddenly DOGE had full access to every federal database.
This was legalized espionage—except instead of targeting foreign adversaries, DOGE turned its gaze inward, burrowing into the deepest corridors of the U.S. government.
3. It Operates Outside Normal Oversight
DOGE wasn’t a new program, which meant Congress couldn’t defund it. The DOJ couldn’t sue it for overreach. It was already integrated into the bureaucracy. You can’t shut down the funding for a future agency that has already existed for a decade.
Even more incredible? It overrides conflicting executive orders. Refusing to comply with DOGE isn’t just bureaucratic disobedience—it’s a direct violation of presidential authority. That’s not some mild workplace insubordination. That’s an executive agency looking at the President of the United States and saying, "Nah, we’re good," as if they have their own separate branch of government. In theory, that kind of defiance should trigger an immediate purge of leadership, because in a functional system, agencies don’t get to ignore the guy whose signature signs their paychecks. But Washington isn’t a functional system—it’s a power-hoarding, rule-bending oligarchy of career bureaucrats who thought they could ignore DOGE. Wrong.
4. It Embedded Itself in Every Federal Agency
Every government office from the EPA to the IRS to the Pentagon suddenly had a DOGE team inside it. And here’s the kicker—they didn’t answer to the agencies they were embedded in. They answered to DOGE.
Imagine being a high-ranking official at the FBI and realizing some kid in your office with a caffeine addiction now has root access to every document you’d rather keep buried.
5. It Rewrote the Surveillance Game
Thanks to 44 USC Chapter 35, DOGE didn’t just monitor government cybersecurity—it owned it. This obscure little statute was supposed to keep federal IT from collapsing under the weight of its own incompetence. Originally, it was a bureaucratic snooze-fest designed to make sure government agencies followed best practices for handling sensitive data, keeping servers from catching fire, and not accidentally emailing classified memos to the wrong people.
But in the fine print, 44 USC Chapter 35 also gave sweeping oversight power to any entity tasked with managing federal IT security. Enter DOGE. When Trump flipped USDS into DOGE, this law became a golden ticket to full-spectrum digital dominance. It meant DOGE wasn’t just watching over federal cybersecurity—it had legal authority to dictate, access, and override every major government data system.
Every login. Every deleted email. Every conveniently “lost” document. DOGE had its claws in all of it before anyone even realized they’d been compromised. What was supposed to be an IT compliance rulebook turned into a bureaucratic backdoor that no one could close.
What started as a routine oversight mechanism turned into total visibility into every federal data system. Every login, every deleted email, every 'Oops, we lost those files' moment—DOGE had the receipts before anyone even knew they were missing.
They built a watchdog, and now it was watching them.
6. It Made Musk the Ultimate Backdoor Operator
Elon Musk didn’t break into the government. He was already inside. Between SpaceX, Starlink, Tesla, and federal contracts, Musk had his hands on key government infrastructure long before DOGE was even named.
So when Trump flipped the switch, Musk was holding the master key. Suddenly, the guy who turned Twitter into a free speech warzone now had backdoor access to the FBI, IRS, and SEC.
Deep state bureaucracy is the biological opposite of innovation. It’s like a Roomba trapped in a corner, bumping into itself over and over while insisting it’s making progress. It doesn’t have the clock cycles to outthink this maneuver, and it damn sure doesn’t have the creativity to counter it. The only people in government who do have the chops are probably in the back row eating popcorn, watching the show like Ron Swanson waving "slash it" pendants at emergency staff meetings.
7. It Became an Untouchable, Self-Sustaining Entity
DOGE doesn’t need new legislation. It doesn’t need constant budget approvals. It just runs.
Bureaucracies operate in a fog of red tape. DOGE bypassed it entirely. It’s a bureaucratic ouroboros—a snake eating its own tail, an unstoppable machine feeding off the system it hijacked.
8. It Trapped Bureaucrats in Their Own Web
The same surveillance state that was supposed to be wielded against the public had been turned inward. The people who once controlled the data now found themselves trapped inside the machine.
They can’t stop it. They can’t contain it.
DOGE is like a rogue AI, learning, adapting, expanding. Government officials are frantically trying to find ways to shut it down, but the system they built won’t let them.
9. It’s Turning the Deep State Against Itself
Washington is used to power struggles, but this one is different. DOGE doesn’t take orders from the usual bureaucratic overlords. It doesn’t play by their rules.
The same agencies that were supposed to be impenetrable fortresses of secrecy now have watchdogs inside their own walls. And no one knows how far DOGE will go before it devours the entire system.
10. There’s No Off Switch
This is the new reality. The government lost control of its own machine, and the worst part? No one can even agree on whether that’s a bad thing.
With DOGE having full access to everything, we are one executive order away from every skeleton in Washington’s closet being exposed.
Every. Single. One.
Obama thought he was building a government IT watchdog. Instead, he built the perfect bureaucratic skeleton key.
Trump saw the opening. Musk exploited it. And now, there’s nothing anyone can do about it.
DOGE hijacked the Deep State. And it can’t be stopped.