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Dennis Donovan

(31,059 posts)
Wed Mar 12, 2025, 11:30 AM Mar 2025

The Atlantic: DOGE is Courting Catastrophic Risk

The Atlantic - (archived: https://archive.ph/VTUsl ) DOGE is Courting Catastrophic Risk

Musk has turned a deeply flawed view of “waste” into a philosophy of government.

By Brian Klaas
March 12, 2025, 9:30 AM ET

On December 26, 2004, the geological plates beneath Sumatra unleashed the third-most-powerful earthquake ever recorded. A gargantuan column of water raced toward Sri Lanka, India, Thailand, and Indonesia. None of these countries had advance-warning systems in place, so no one had time to prepare before the surge hit. Some 228,000 people died—the highest toll of any natural disaster so far this century.

Setting up prevention systems would have been inexpensive, especially compared with the countless billions the tsunami ultimately cost. But governments typically spend money on preventing disasters only after disasters strike, and the affected countries hadn’t experienced a major tsunami in years. After the events of 2004, USAID spent a tiny fraction of its budget to help fund an advance-detection system for the Pacific, which might have saved hundreds of thousands of lives had it been in place sooner. But some people would have seen such an investment as a “waste”—inefficient spending that could have gone toward some more immediate or tangible end.

DOGE has turned this dangerously flawed view into a philosophy of government. Last week, Elon Musk’s makeshift agency fired one of the main scientists responsible for providing advance warning when the next tsunami hits Alaska, Hawaii, or the Pacific Coast. The USAID document that describes America’s efforts to protect coastlines from tsunamis, titled “Pounds of Prevention”—riffing on the adage that an ounce of prevention is worth a pound of cure—now redirects to an error message: “The resource you are trying to access is temporarily unavailable.”

More than 800 workers at the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration have lost their job in recent weeks, including many who helped mitigate climate disasters, track hurricanes, predict ever-stronger storms, and notify potential victims. Meanwhile, cuts to volcano monitoring are crippling the government’s ability to measure eruption risk. DOGE is also reportedly preparing to cancel the lease on the government’s “nerve center” for national weather forecasts.

Musk has categorized as superfluous a good deal of spending that actually makes the country more resilient, at a time when catastrophic risk is on the rise. We never see the crises that the government averts, only the ones it fails to prevent. Preparing for them may seem wasteful—until suddenly, tragically, it doesn’t.

/snip
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The Atlantic: DOGE is Courting Catastrophic Risk (Original Post) Dennis Donovan Mar 2025 OP
The parasite got rich because of government policy, government subsidies, and government contracts dalton99a Mar 2025 #1
Pakleds. There is not Geordi LaForge to "make it go". . . . . . nt Bernardo de La Paz Mar 2025 #2
GOP wants systemic failure as their goal IronLionZion Mar 2025 #3
With blood on their hands, laughing all the way to the bank Martin Eden Mar 2025 #4

dalton99a

(94,215 posts)
1. The parasite got rich because of government policy, government subsidies, and government contracts
Wed Mar 12, 2025, 11:33 AM
Mar 2025

IronLionZion

(51,280 posts)
3. GOP wants systemic failure as their goal
Wed Mar 12, 2025, 04:14 PM
Mar 2025

They will then blame government as the problem, when in reality it was GOP's cuts across the board without any thoughtful analysis about consequences.

When that happens, tax cuts won't be much consolation. But you best believe the GOP will call for more cuts as the solution.

Martin Eden

(15,635 posts)
4. With blood on their hands, laughing all the way to the bank
Thu Mar 13, 2025, 06:12 AM
Mar 2025

Until the economy collapses and they're on the receiving end of torches and pitchforks.

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