Trump's 'Big, Beautiful' Military Parade Is a Big, Ugly Waste of Millions of Dollars
Most Americans, it turns out, do not think it is a good use of taxpayer money, according to a recent poll.
Most Americans, it turns out, do not think it is a good use of taxpayer money, according to a recent poll.
The libertarians aren't in charge. But the lesson of the last decade of politics is that they should be.
From financing eminent domain abuses in Tennessee to climate-friendly ketchup, the Biden administration approved billions of dollars in wasteful spending.
Plus: A cynical take on Zohran Mamdani, Florida's drinking water threatened, and more...
DOGE says regulatory changes will save $29.4 billion, but that does not amount to a reduction in government outlays, the initiative's ostensible target.
The good parts of his executive order could easily get mired in the swamp.
The Trump administration's plans to slash science funding could end up liberating researchers from the corrupting influence Dwight Eisenhower warned about.
Plus: A listener asks which domestic policy changes could realistically boost U.S. manufacturing without raising costs for consumers.
Elon Musk promised $2 trillion in cuts but delivered only a tiny portion of that total. We asked seven policy experts to explain what he got wrong.
Three libertarians—Dave Smith, J.D. Tuccille, and Liz Wolfe—revisit their reluctant votes for Trump, weighing the promises, chaos, and consequences of his second term so far.
As he shifts his focus away from DOGE, he acknowledges the need for hard choices and congressional action.
Impoundment, line-item vetoes, and the tricky problem of cutting spending through the executive branch
The budget proposal calls for gutting federal energy funding and environmental justice initiatives.
When compared to the most likely alternatives, DOGE has cut as much government as one could hope for.
The feds are rapidly deploying artificial intelligence across spy agencies. What could go wrong?
The cost cutter's current projection of annual "savings" is 85 percent lower than the goal he set two months ago—and even that number can't be trusted.
The Nobel Prize-winning economist says the Iron Triangle of Politics must be defeated to cut down the government for good.
Dynamists, protectionists, hawks, and doves are seeing their policy goals realized in the most bungling and incompetent fashion imaginable.
Brown is violating its code of conduct, which guarantees community members’ right to petition the university.
Despite efforts to rein in government debt, gold prices keep rising—suggesting investors aren’t buying the promises of fiscal responsibility.
Two months after he was inaugurated, Trump has smashed many of the government's silly DEI rules. But he hasn't created a new age of meritocracy.
Plus: Rehiring federal workers, using Signal to orchestrate bombing the Houthis, and more...
Courts stop DOGE from accessing Social Security Administration data and prevent Homeland Security from deporting Georgetown fellow Badar Khan Suri.
The Federal Acquisition Regulation requires the right for the government to terminate any federal contract "for convenience."
Vox's Kelsey Piper joins the show to discuss the drastic differences between the Biden and Trump administrations on AI—and what it all means for the future of humanity.
Plus: Who's in charge of DOGE, protests over Israel's renewed assault on Gaza, and a tribute to the life of Manuel Klausner.
Musk's fans and critics will keep debating whether DOGE is revolutionizing government or wrecking important institutions.
Passengers suing the TSA for First Amendment violations have had a rough time in court.
The cost-cutting initiative's calculation of "estimated savings" is mostly mysterious, and the parts we know about are riddled with errors.
Since Congress began requiring annual audits in 2018, the Department of Defense has never passed.
Plus: "Is any criticism of the government a deportable offense?" and more...
It's far from the first case of terrorism inflation.
The U.S. can defend itself at a lot less expense.
Threats to impeach federal judges who rule against the government are a naked attack on their constitutionally crucial function.
The judge found that the agency's "unusual secrecy" and "substantial authority" make it subject to public record laws.
Plus: A listener asks the editors to discuss the pros and cons of homeownership.
Plus: Ceasefire talks, J.D. Vance as the future of the GOP, the government's war on treehouses, and more...
FCC v. Consumers’ Research could dismantle a massive slush fund run by unelected regulators and industry insiders.
Plus: The Trump administration's American dream revisionism, 50 theses on DOGE, what people get wrong about extreme MAGA, and more...
Reform could replace an unsustainable boondoggle with lower costs, more freedom, and better care.
Entitlements are a much bigger expense, but that doesn't mean the waste doesn't matter.
The president's assertion is divorced from reality, and so are the "estimated savings" touted by Elon Musk.
Handouts to corporations distort the market, breed corruption, and politicize the economy.
If only they were as big as the list of new spending.
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