Elon Musk's mass government cuts could make private companies millions
Source: The Guardian
Elon Musks mass government cuts could make private companies millions
Defense and tech firms including Musks own await potential contracts as Doge decimates US agencies
Nick Robins-Early
Sun 16 Feb 2025 12.00 GMT
Last modified on Sun 16 Feb 2025 12.02 GMT
The worlds richest man, Elon Musk, has vowed to oversee a radical hollowing out of government agencies, asserting this week that some should be deleted entirely as he defunds public programs and lays off federal workers. While the immense cuts are framed as a means of removing waste, they may also become a boon to private companies including Musks own businesses that the government increasingly relies on for many of its key initiatives.
Musk and his allies in the department of government efficiency (Doge), the unofficial committee acting as the operations arm of his cost-cutting efforts, have targeted a range of major government departments. They have moved to close the United States Agency for International Development, slashed the Department of Education and taken over the General Services Administration that controls federal IT structures. Doge staffers have also gained access to the treasury department, as well as set their sights on the Department of Defense, energy department, Environmental Protection Agency and at least a dozen others.
While Doge begins to make deep cuts throughout the government, Musk and those acting on his behalf have called for implementing new artificial intelligence systems in federal agencies and completely overhauling American weapons programs. As humanitarian aid groups reel from Musks cuts, tech and defense firms are seeing a chance to integrate themselves deeper into the new Trump administrations agenda.
Musks plans have already excited Silicon Valley mainstays such as Palantir, whose executives praised Doge on an earnings call last week and talked about how the disruption by the billionaires strike squad was good for the company. Palantir already has won hundreds of millions of dollars in US military contracts in recent years for AI-related projects.
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Read more: https://www.theguardian.com/technology/2025/feb/16/elon-musk-doge-government-privatization

EarlG
(22,831 posts)Piratization.
yellow dahlia
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Can we steal it?
notinkansas
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Yo_Mama_Been_Loggin
(121,834 posts)slightlv
(5,397 posts)It costs more in the short and long run... plus, the people (for the most part) are NOT as dedicated to the mission. So it ends up being a flop mess all around.