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Related: Editorials & Other Articles, Issue Forums, Alliance Forums, Region ForumsProPublica - Trump's War on Measurement Means Losing Data on Drug Use, Maternal Mortality, Climate Change and More
ProPublica - Trumps War on Measurement Means Losing Data on Drug Use, Maternal Mortality, Climate Change and More
by Alec MacGillis
April 18, 2025, 6 a.m. EDT
By slashing teams that gather critical data, the administration has left the federal government with no way of understanding if policies are working and created a black hole of information whose consequences could ripple out for decades.
More children ages 1 to 4 die of drowning than any other cause of death. Nearly a quarter of adults received mental health treatment in 2023, an increase of 3.4 million from the prior year. The number of migrants from Mexico and northern Central American countries stopped by the U.S. Border Patrol was surpassed in 2022 by the number of migrants from other nations.
We know these things because the federal government collects, organizes and shares the data behind them. Every year, year after year, workers in agencies that many of us have never heard of have been amassing the statistics that undergird decision-making at all levels of government and inform the judgments of business leaders, school administrators and medical providers nationwide.
The survival of that data is now in doubt, as a result of the Department of Government Efficiencys comprehensive assault on the federal bureaucracy.
Reaction to those cuts has focused understandably on the hundreds of thousands of civil servants who have lost their jobs or are on the verge of doing so and the harm that millions of people could suffer as a result of the shuttering of aid programs. Overlooked amid the turmoil is the fact that many of DOGEs cuts have been targeted at a very specific aspect of the federal government: its collection and sharing of data. In agency after agency, the government is losing its capacity to measure how American society is functioning, making it much harder for elected officials or others to gauge the nature and scale of the problems we are facing and the effectiveness of solutions being deployed against them.
/snip
by Alec MacGillis
April 18, 2025, 6 a.m. EDT
By slashing teams that gather critical data, the administration has left the federal government with no way of understanding if policies are working and created a black hole of information whose consequences could ripple out for decades.
More children ages 1 to 4 die of drowning than any other cause of death. Nearly a quarter of adults received mental health treatment in 2023, an increase of 3.4 million from the prior year. The number of migrants from Mexico and northern Central American countries stopped by the U.S. Border Patrol was surpassed in 2022 by the number of migrants from other nations.
We know these things because the federal government collects, organizes and shares the data behind them. Every year, year after year, workers in agencies that many of us have never heard of have been amassing the statistics that undergird decision-making at all levels of government and inform the judgments of business leaders, school administrators and medical providers nationwide.
The survival of that data is now in doubt, as a result of the Department of Government Efficiencys comprehensive assault on the federal bureaucracy.
Reaction to those cuts has focused understandably on the hundreds of thousands of civil servants who have lost their jobs or are on the verge of doing so and the harm that millions of people could suffer as a result of the shuttering of aid programs. Overlooked amid the turmoil is the fact that many of DOGEs cuts have been targeted at a very specific aspect of the federal government: its collection and sharing of data. In agency after agency, the government is losing its capacity to measure how American society is functioning, making it much harder for elected officials or others to gauge the nature and scale of the problems we are facing and the effectiveness of solutions being deployed against them.
/snip
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ProPublica - Trump's War on Measurement Means Losing Data on Drug Use, Maternal Mortality, Climate Change and More (Original Post)
Dennis Donovan
Yesterday
OP
tanyev
(46,093 posts)1. The ONLY data Trump cares about are his personal approval ratings.
See also Covid: Slow the testing down, please!
Buns_of_Fire
(18,343 posts)2. Numbers are hard, and sometimes embarrassing.
Therefore, Dear Leader will now use whatever metric he pulls out of his ginormous ass to demonstrate his superiority to all past presidents, going all the way back to the beginning of the United States in 1334 (which is just another so-called "number" that has no meaning to His Lardness).
Besides, "1334" is an Arabic number, and we will not let them thar foreigners dictate our sacred Murkan measurements. So from this point forward, all government measurements will be expressed in "Trumps" (per Executive Order SuperTrumpy-TrumpTrump-Trump).