Lifeboat:  A recap of John McGuire’s call-in Town Hall

Representative John McGuire of Virginia’s 5th Congressional District held a call-in town hall meeting recently.  I don’t know how many folks attended the town hall, but I do know that when folks were selected to ask McGuire questions the majority queried him about Medicaid cuts and DOGE. Funny, no talks of eggs.

McGuire started the town hall by asking listeners to participate in a poll.  The first question was, “do they want to root out waste, fraud, and abuse? “ That’s like asking Medieval folks if they want to root out Black Death, the plague.  Of course they did.  It’s the methodology that they had quibbles over.  In 17th century England, if a household member got plague, the whole household was locked inside the house for 30 or 45 days, a guard posted outside.  That quarantine was extended as other household members sickened and died.  Normally, everyone perished.  Sounds a bit like DOGE’s methodology regarding USAID and lifesaving anti-viral drugs for millions of Africans. 

But back to the town hall.  The first question McGuire was asked sounded the alarm about the proposed $880 billion dollar cut to government agencies overseen by the energy and commerce committee.  This would entail massive cuts to Medicaid, the caller thought.  McGuire’s response was to happily, almost joyfully, point out that Medicaid was not mentioned once in the proposed budget blueprint.  Duh!  The New York Times reported that if the committee cut all other non-safety net programs under their oversight, they would still have to eliminate an additional $600 billion in funding.  That means Medicaid would be hit….hard.

Another caller, a preacher, pointed out that 24 percent of his district receives Medicaid.   I asked myself, did it ever dawn on McGuire to ask himself, “why do so many folks who work full-time jobs in my district can’t afford medical insurance or care? “ Piss poor wages dude!  Nationwide, over 64 percent of Medicaid recipients work.  In Louisa County, 17 percent receive Medicaid, and this is in a county where unemployment is just a smidge over 2 percent. According to Virginia law, if Medicaid expansion funding from the Federal government drops to a certain level, the program is abandoned.  Yes, abandoned.  That would mean 600,000 Virginians would lose access to health care, many of whom are kids.  Later callers, it was clear, weren’t buying McGuire’s Trumpian responses.

The same went for DOGE.  Near universal condemnation of DOGE’s chainsaw approach, many pointing out its cold-heartedness.  One caller, from the Charlottesville area, said folks in her organization – which she specified — were worried about the haphazard cuts and potential cuts to come.  In perhaps a Freudian slip, McGuire spoke of her position and organization in the past tense.   Which he corrected quickly.  I am sure that that slip was noted by listeners.

During overwhelmingly negative comments and questions regarding DOGE’s incompetence and draconian Medicaid cuts, McGuire’s aid interjected and offered an email question.  The email question was quite flattering of McGuire.  Really, were not dumb!

Overall, McGuire got an earful, but I don’t think he listened.  Too often he used rehearsed and prepared talking points (you heard papers shuffling) instead of genuine concern.  Given the tenure of other town halls I seen or heard about, I was surprised at how calm the questioners were.  Very civil, very polite, but direct as well.  McGuire was civil himself, but too often resorting to the same phrase, saying, ‘I still love you even though we disagree.’  

I think McGuire forgot a cardinal rule in politics:  He forgot who he works for.  We expect our politicians to omit and lie and obfuscate, but we don’t expect them to work against our interests.  It was obvious he works for Trump and not us.  Ben Franklin at the Constitutional Convention in Philadelphia in 1787 said it best I think:  “In free governments, the rulers are the servants, and the people their superiors and sovereigns.”

You may be wondering why Lifeboat” is in the title of this essay. I remember as a kid watching a black and white war movie telling the story of the survivors of a torpedoed merchant ship.  The drama takes place in the overcrowded lifeboat: too many people, not enough space, too little food or water.  As time passed people died or were killed.  I realized later with age and little bit of wisdom, that the lifeboat was a parable about class and society.  The passengers represented a spectrum of society:  a wealthy socialite, working class ship hands, upper class passengers, the young and elderly, a vulnerable woman with a dead child, an enemy portrayed by the German U-boat captain. Conflicts ensued as resources, and hope, dwindled.  Winners and losers.  Everyone dead or morally tainted.

That’s the paradigm that sticks in my mind when I think of politics in America today.  America the Lifeboat.  Billions, tens of billions in cuts to Medicaid and other safety-net programs — mostly to working class folks – to pay for $4 trillion in tax cuts, the bulk of the dollars going to the wealthiest Americans.   I think that’s not the ‘golden age’ most folks who voted for Trump envisioned or want.

Golden, Gilded, or Gelded: America, Tech Bros, and the Age of Unchecked Constitutional Abuses

Trump promised a golden age, some see a gilded age, I see a gelded age.   That’s not to say that money doesn’t talk, it always has in politics, but I don’t see a plutocracy of tech bros calling the shots in Washington.  Even though Musk appeared to secure a co-presidency through a $270ish million-dollar donation to Trump, he will soon learn that a fool and his money are soon parted.  Anyway, technically, a billionaire occupies the White House, one who used his first term to increase his wealth and does not seem averse to using his second term to accumulate greater wealth and power.  He is a profiteer at heart, while proclaiming to be a disruptor of the Washington swamp. 

The tech bros, while appearing to leverage power through wealth much like Gilded Age titans of industry, they don’t leverage much if any real power.  A ‘like,’ a ‘post,’ a ‘search’ are ephemeral.  Except for Musk, they really don’t make anything of tactile value.  They do control the flow of information, however, and that’s what Trump wants access to.  He wants to coopt the tech bros to obliterate the difference between fact and fiction, truth and falsehood for the purpose of eroding democracy.  That’s the irony, using tech to control and manipulate the lifeblood of democracy:  An informed and educated populace.

Jefferson wrote it best in a letter to Judge William Johnson in June 1823 some two hundred years ago:  “I know no safe depository of the ultimate powers of society but the peoples themselves; and if we think them not enlightened enough to exercise their control with a wholesome discretion, the remedy is not to take it from them, but to inform their discretion by education.  This is the true corrective of abuses of constitutional power.”

The theater that was the inauguration said much about how Trump sees the world and the tech bros.  Those that read tea leaves saw plutocracy, a new Gilded Age, pointing to Jeff Bezos (Amazon), Mark Zuckerberg (Meta), Sundar Pichai (Google), and Elon Musk (Tesla, Starlink, X, SpaceX) sitting behind Trump.  With Musk closest to the Trump of the four.  

What I saw was a modern version of a Roman Triumph. Way back when Rome ruled much of Europe, when a Roman general won a significant victory he was accorded a paraded through the streets of Rome.   Behind the chariot carrying the general were his warrior prisoners, marking their subjugation,  and carts of gold and silver or other tributes.  The Tech Bros, provided Trump million-dollar donations – the modern American version of tribute – to fund his inauguration.  To me, the four weren’t there as honored guests but were Trump’s display of defeated enemies.  Fortunately for the Tech Bros, they did not suffer the same fate as the defeated after the end of the procession.

How does Trump coopt them?  Simple:  Greed and fear.  Greed:  They all have multibillion dollar businesses to protect and fear Trump because he has the power to cancel their billion-dollar government contracts.  Amazon’s cloud computing contracts, for example, or, for Musk, other government investments.  Musk benefited from $38 billion in federal investments.  Zuckerberg’s fears are more focused on DOJ civil litigation threats, I think.  Fear:  They know Trump’s penchant for vengeance.  With a phone call Trump’s regulatory agencies can investigate.  Trump’s IRS can audit.  Trump’s DOJ can threaten both civil and criminal investigations, for instance, target Google’s internet search monopoly.

They all reacted differently.  Musk became the collaborator, Bezos the stooge, Zuckerberg a wet piece of toast, Pichai seems to have gone deep and silent after changing Gulf of Mexico to Gulf of America.    

Bezos’ behavior is comedic.  Changing and limiting the opinion section of the Washington Post, the newspaper he owns.  Recall, he pulled the Post’s endorsement of Harris before the election.  Additionally, Amazon Prime reportedly paid Melania Trump $40 million for a biopic.  More recently, Amazon Prime began streaming Trump’s reality TV show, The Apprentice.  Zuckerberg, jettisoned content moderation and fired its fact checkers and quite publicly proclaiming the end of DEI at Meta.  

Bezos, Pichai, Musk, and Zuckerberg are not part of a new Gilded Age but are part of a new Gelded Age.  An Age marked by dissolving the lines between fact and fiction, truth and falsehood so that abuses of constitutional power are unchecked. 

The Faceless Bureaucrat: DOGE and the war on the Career Civil and Foreign Services

Let me start with the proposition that DOGE’s war on the career civil and foreign services is not about waste, fraud, and abuse. It is about removing obstacles to rule by edict by an imperial Presidency. It is about undermining the rule of law.

When pressed for examples of gross government abuse by petty bureaucrats during a phone-in town hall, all Virginia representative John McGuire, a first term Republican from my district, could muster was a federal grant to study cat cannibalism. I did not fact check completely, however, but the study he referenced may have been the same cat experiments reported by the media in 2016, and stopped. .Not exactly the jaw dropping example I expected. In fact, his example undercut his argument greatly about DOGE’s effectiveness.

Hunting down waste, fraud, and abuse is a red herring. The goal is to turn faceless federal bureaucrats into scapegoats, criminals, lazy, unqualified, fat cats, who lounge all day at home in their pajamas while living large off the teats of taxpayers. The fact is the vast, vast majority are hardworking, patriotic, folks, many of whom risk life and limb. Let me tell you about four faceless bureaucrats that I worked with:

The first, a classmate and fellow special agent, was returning home from war-torn Beirut to be a groomsman in another classmate’s Christmas holidays wedding.  He died over Lockerbie, Scottland along with another agent on PAN AM flight 103.  Another colleague and friend of mine died in Baghdad during a rocket attack.  A year later, a fourth colleague died in Mosul when his motorcade was hit by a complex attack followed by a vehicle borne suicide bomber.  Another colleague was in Benghazi when the Ambassador and a communications officer died during an attack on the consulate. He evacuated to another complex and was on the roof defending the complex when a mortar round exploded nearby, concussing him, one leg tethered to his by by shards of skin. He survived. I came to know him as he recovered in hospital. All of them are patriots, they were all veterans, they answered their countries call to serve. They all had families. Till now they were all faceless bureaucrats to you. We knew them, we honored them, we served with them. f

Faceless bureaucrats like these go to work everyday in America and around the world, in every cline, facing every possible danger. Scientist virus hunters in the Congo, climatologists in Antartica, Hot Shot jumpers going into fight massive forest fires, special agents fighting cartels in Mexico with their Mexican counterparts, park rangers rescuing or searching for lost or missing hikers in inhospitable terrain and conditions.

Faceless bureaucrat are a target of DOGE because a non-partisan career civil and foreign service are an important component of a liberal democracy. They are a bulwark against illegal and unconstitutional acts and orders. They swear an oath to defend the Constitution, their loyalty is to the people. They are essential to maintaining the rule of law, not man.