By Kevin D. Williamson
Friday, February
21, 2025
There is a cliché about not letting the perfect be the
enemy of the good, and it’s a fine piece of wisdom as far as such maxims go,
but the perfect is not the only enemy of the good.
The bad, for example, is also the enemy of the
good.
My friends over at National Review have published
an editorial that is not good, and not because it is less than perfect but
because it is bad. And one of the bad things it does is engage in a bit of
intellectual dishonesty—and, not being eager to bruise any feelings, I am sorry
the term is needed here—about DOGE, which is that its critics are judging it by
unrealistic standards: “One ought not to let the perfect be the enemy of the
good,” they write. This is, of course, an example—better than good and almost
perfect—of begging the question. It is a bright red flag to mark a sickly
argument.
Fond as Trump is of the word “perfect,” no non-insane
person has ever suggested perfection as a standard for the Trump
administration. Decency and competency would represent shocking overperformance
of all sensible expectations.
But there’s no danger of such overperformance at the
moment.
“Thus far,” the editors write, “DOGE has represented
nothing more dramatic than an audit of federal spending of the sort in which
the president of the United States — acting via any agent he sees fit to name —
is self-evidently permitted to engage. There is nothing intrinsically wrong
with Elon Musk playing accountant for President Trump, providing that he does
not act in contravention of Trump’s wishes or trample on any of the
prerogatives that the American system accords to Congress.”
But that is not quite right—and not quite a full and
honest accounting, either. No, Elon Musk is not personally issuing orders to
fire employees and cancel programs, but the formal camouflage here is
pretextual. Offices are, in fact, being
gutted on DOGE’s say-so. And there is, in fact, a great deal wrong with
Elon Musk playing accountant. For one thing, Elon Musk is not an accountant and
doesn’t seem to be very good at it; for another, he is de facto exercising
authority that cannot properly be delegated to an unaccountable “special”
federal employee acting in secrecy in order to evade oversight and
accountability. The consequences have been both chaotic and destructive.
And that is because Musk is leading a team of amateurs
and incompetents. The Department of Agriculture, for example, acting on DOGE
orders, fired a bunch of bird-flu experts whose services it desperately needs,
only to immediately
turn around and attempt to rehire them. The DOGE team does not seem to be
able to reliably
tell the difference between billions and millions when it comes to
taxpayers’ dollars. DOGE plays fast and loose with its definitions of savings,
calculating its results based on hypothetical maximums rather than actual
sums. DOGE uses phony concern over “efficiency” to punish
unfriendly media outlets such as Reuters and Politico, ordering
federal agencies to cancel subscriptions to specific publications that have
been critical of the president. DOGE’s own website is so poorly designed that
it already
has been hacked and defaced.
And then there is the larger matter of data security,
which I am still digging into but will talk just a little bit about here. As
the Washington
Post reports, the DOGE team has fed sensitive data from federal systems
into AI black boxes to analyze spending—and there is reason to suspect that
this was not done in an entirely secure fashion. I am not prepared to go into
the arcana at this time, but exploitable data about federal digital
infrastructure has been showing up in places where it shouldn’t and where it
hasn’t before. (This seems to be at least partly related to security issues
that predate the Trump administration’s swearing in.) Given DOGE’s inability to
secure its own website—and the fact that the project is run by a drug-addled
troll who, however successful in his own field, has no particular expertise
in the systems in question—there is no reason to be very confident in the
digital security of the larger project.
And for what? DOGE is not
cutting government spending in any meaningful way. Every indicator we have
right now points to spending and debt
that will be larger this year than last year and a debt that will be much
larger at the end of the second Trump administration than at its beginning.
Republican spending-cut plans right now are Trump-style
plan-to-have-a-plan plans. Whatever forcing government agencies to cancel
their subscriptions to Politico newsletters is about, it isn’t about
putting the U.S. government on sound fiscal footing. Elon Musk insists that a
“balanced budget” is happening. I’ll happily bet him everything in my bank
account vs. everything in his that no such thing comes to pass during Trump’s
presidency. As the editorial concedes, the Trump team has repeatedly made it
clear that the big budget items—entitlement reform and tax reform in the
deficit-reducing direction—are off the table. That’s a lot of
stupidity and chaos for no meaningful fiscal progress.
So, Charlie National Review editors, there
is more to talk about here than failure to achieve a state of administrative
perfection. Because what we have here is an idiotic vandalism spree conducted
by incompetents toward no useful end, possibly violating the law and likely
creating data-security problems. No, that isn’t perfect. And it isn’t good. It
is an unpolishable turd. This is what comes of leaping at opportunities to say
something positive about the Trump administration wherever such opportunities
can be detected—or imagined. It is not a good impulse, and by that I mean not
an imperfect one but a bad one.
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