Highlights
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The biggest scam in human history
Or possibly even worse!
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The untraceable payments just smells like pure BS. I’ve worked with enough companies to know that data tracking is usually shit.
Companies spend 6 months sometimes putting together things called “spend cubes”. They’ll pay the likes of McKinsey millions of dollars to do that.
They just found a database that wasn’t maintained well. That’s the norm.
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I don't think it's just a somewhat ill maintained database. I think it's a database that has subsets that don't mesh with each other, wide swaths of missing data and instances of pure incompetence. Whatever those reasons are, DOGE keeps coming up with significant lapses and funds that cannot be properly accounted for.
Is it as much as DOGE has claimed? Maybe. Maybe not. But it's still a mountain of money.
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What we've seen actual evidence of isn't particularly mind-blowing. There's a lot of hyperbole, for sure.
And the fact that government isn't very good at maintaining its data is about as surprising as the fact that there's a lot of hyperbole.
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What we've seen actual evidence of isn't particularly mind-blowing. There's a lot of hyperbole, for sure.
And the fact that government isn't very good at maintaining its data is about as surprising as the fact that there's a lot of hyperbole.
@Doctor-Phibes said in Highlights:
What we've seen actual evidence of isn't particularly mind-blowing. There's a lot of hyperbole, for sure.
And the fact that government isn't very good at maintaining its data is about as surprising as the fact that there's a lot of hyperbole.
Back in the days when medical labs still used a good bit of glass, the local VA would have Glass Day. Just before the end of the fiscal year and inventory, they'd break every piece of surplus glass they had. Sometimes having games behind the hospital, where they threw glass at hard targets or shot glass with BB guns. They did that, because any surplus would impact their budget for the next cycle.
They don't use much glass anymore, but the mentality still exists. I believe the lavishing of COVID money put departments into drunken sailor mode.
We have to return to sanity.
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@Doctor-Phibes said in Highlights:
What we've seen actual evidence of isn't particularly mind-blowing. There's a lot of hyperbole, for sure.
And the fact that government isn't very good at maintaining its data is about as surprising as the fact that there's a lot of hyperbole.
Back in the days when medical labs still used a good bit of glass, the local VA would have Glass Day. Just before the end of the fiscal year and inventory, they'd break every piece of surplus glass they had. Sometimes having games behind the hospital, where they threw glass at hard targets or shot glass with BB guns. They did that, because any surplus would impact their budget for the next cycle.
They don't use much glass anymore, but the mentality still exists. I believe the lavishing of COVID money put departments into drunken sailor mode.
We have to return to sanity.
@Jolly said in Highlights:
@Doctor-Phibes said in Highlights:
What we've seen actual evidence of isn't particularly mind-blowing. There's a lot of hyperbole, for sure.
And the fact that government isn't very good at maintaining its data is about as surprising as the fact that there's a lot of hyperbole.
Back in the days when medical labs still used a good bit of glass, the local VA would have Glass Day. Just before the end of the fiscal year and inventory, they'd break every piece of surplus glass they had. Sometimes having games behind the hospital, where they threw glass at hard targets or shot glass with BB guns. They did that, because any surplus would impact their budget for the next cycle.
They don't use much glass anymore, but the mentality still exists. I believe the lavishing of COVID money put departments into drunken sailor mode.
We have to return to sanity.
Sure, fiscal responsibility would be great. I have a budget at work and at home, just like everybody. But that's really not what Elon is saying. He's off on a wild ride talking about the greatest scam in the history of humanity. It feels like connecting him to at least a semblance of reality would be nice.
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@Jolly said in Highlights:
@Doctor-Phibes said in Highlights:
What we've seen actual evidence of isn't particularly mind-blowing. There's a lot of hyperbole, for sure.
And the fact that government isn't very good at maintaining its data is about as surprising as the fact that there's a lot of hyperbole.
Back in the days when medical labs still used a good bit of glass, the local VA would have Glass Day. Just before the end of the fiscal year and inventory, they'd break every piece of surplus glass they had. Sometimes having games behind the hospital, where they threw glass at hard targets or shot glass with BB guns. They did that, because any surplus would impact their budget for the next cycle.
They don't use much glass anymore, but the mentality still exists. I believe the lavishing of COVID money put departments into drunken sailor mode.
We have to return to sanity.
Sure, fiscal responsibility would be great. I have a budget at work and at home, just like everybody. But that's really not what Elon is saying. He's off on a wild ride talking about the greatest scam in the history of humanity. It feels like connecting him to at least a semblance of reality would be nice.
@Doctor-Phibes said in Highlights:
connecting him to at least a semblance of reality
I hope that is what he is trying to do.
This topic is the reason Mr. Trump was elected 8 years ago.
This is why he was elected again.