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24 February 2025

Musk's Ultimatum 

Why couldn’t the February 2025 request from DOGE for federal employee self-critique memos have come from the president and directed that all answers be submitted to the cabinet-level official in charge of the employee’s agency? Such a procedure would have obviated suspicions of violating confidentiality and reinforced the structure of the executive branch.

President Trump was correct that this exercise can be a useful audit of government efficiency. However, it is another illustration of the Trump administration’s chaotic approach to doing the people’s business.

By the way, a “presidential advisor," like Musk, has no power to order civil servants to do anything or to fire any of them for non-compliance.


23 February 2025

In 2024, MAGA Voters Needed Practical Solutions to Their Problems 

MAGA Voters won’t listen to reasonable arguments in the abstract. They feel that Trump shows them how to succeed by disobeying the establishment’s rules.  Ramaswamy and Haley missed this point in the primaries.  They proudly restated Trump’s tirades in rational terms; but their arguments fell on angry ears that are deaf to what is  viewed as pusillanimity.  Unfortunately, Harris didn’t take up the banner in the general election, either.

The MAGA movement is not based primarily on policy differences. It is a paroxysm of resentment at being left behind.  Its members can be weaned away from a demagogue only by believable promises of improvement in their economic well-being and in their living ease.

This is where the Democrats must focus to weaken the reliability of the MAGA base for Republicans. Defeating that electoral juggernaut means instilling a sense of being valued by the program of the “establishment” to create safety-net incentives and encourage risk-taking and determined effort by ordinary citizens in their career, budgeting, and investment decisions. That should have been  the centerpiece of the 2024 Democratic platform.  Instead, the Harris/Walz campaign only targeted the minority slice of the public that are critical thinkers, who are equally concerned about  the general welfare as well as  individuals’ well-being.  That portion of the population is often accused of ignoring the concerns that really matter to most people.


14 February 2025

Privatizing Gov't Programs With Tax Credits 

If the government is truly less efficient at executing humanitarian programs than the private sector, private donors should be incentivized with tax credits to replace current public sector services. The latter include foreign aid, medicare, medicaid, educational grants, public housing, etc. The net consequence of a policy to offer, say, unlimited 100% income tax credits for funds spent on qualified programs could harness the profit motive of entrepreneurs and the good will of billionaires in the achievement of human benefit for the purposes of both domestic equity and international political advantage.

Federal Legislation ought to be drafted to substitute corporate and high level personal income tax credits for government deficit budgeting on such independently approved programs. Instead of monitoring public waste, inefficiency and corruption through politics, capital markets and public opinion can be tasked with disciplining the humanitarian programs of private business and donors.

05 February 2025

Whose Attention Brings Power? 

Ezra Klein’s article in the 26 January 2025 NYT begs the question whether Donald Trump’s targeted audience whose attention he seeks is the same one sought by the billionaire  influence-peddlers who were provocatively seated at his inauguration.  This goes to Trump’s valid  perception that political power in a liberal democracy such as ours belongs to those who are most adept at manipulating information to appeal to the majority of persons who willingly vote and patronize the wealthiest suppliers of information media and consumer goods.  Critical thinking is not the strongest attribute of most people.

To resolve Mr. Klein’s (and James Madison’s) dilemma, those few of us who are lucky enough to merit and afford a higher education must get off our high horses.  We must  speak to the average public in the language of their common concerns to convince them that the MAGA program of mercantilism and its me-first philosophy are neither  in their long-term nor their immediate interest.


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