logo
DOGE Needs a New Strategy After Elon Musk

DOGE Needs a New Strategy After Elon Musk

David Walker, former comptroller general of the U.S., makes the case that 'DOGE Has Work Left to Do' (op-ed, June 10) after Elon Musk's departure. It appears that Mr. Musk and his associates relied in large part on analysis of large databases to determine if waste, fraud and abuse were present, without actually deploying boots on the ground to interview those involved. Such database analysis provides useful information but not definitive answers about individual circumstances.
When I worked as a special agent for the Government Accountability Office, I was assigned to interview an administrative law judge who appeared to be collecting disability payments from Social Security despite his having returned to his federal job after heart surgery. The judge readily admitted to it. I asked why he didn't inform Social Security of his return to work, to which he responded that he had, several times. He had saved the letters and made note of the numerous phone calls too. I asked why he didn't return the Social Security checks, but he said that the payments had been directly deposited into his bank account and that he was ready to return all the money once someone told him how to do so.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Washington Post Probes Hack of Journalist Email Accounts
Washington Post Probes Hack of Journalist Email Accounts

Bloomberg

time13 minutes ago

  • Bloomberg

Washington Post Probes Hack of Journalist Email Accounts

By and Jane Lanhee Lee Save The Washington Post is investigating a cyber attack on the email accounts of some journalists, prompting the newspaper to beef up its online security. The intrusion was discovered late Thursday and the company carried out a forced reset of login credentials for all staff the following night, according to a memo sent by Executive Editor Matt Murray to affected employees on Sunday. The memo, reviewed by Bloomberg News, said the attack affected a limited number of email accounts of journalists and a forensic team had been brought in to investigate.

Minnesota lawmaker shootings underscore frequency of US political violence
Minnesota lawmaker shootings underscore frequency of US political violence

Yahoo

time15 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

Minnesota lawmaker shootings underscore frequency of US political violence

Two Minnesota lawmakers were shot, one fatally, on Saturday in an apparent assassination plot that underscored the growing frequency of political violence in the US. Authorities said a gunman impersonating a police officer killed a high-ranking state representative and her husband in their home, and also targeted a state senator and his wife. Like school shootings, politically motivated attacks are an 'inescapable reality' in the US, The New York Times wrote: In the last several months, two Israeli diplomats were killed in Washington, and an arsonist set the Pennsylvania governor's residence on fire. Writing in The Atlantic, political scientist Brian Klaas highlights how easy access to weapons, incitement from public figures, and 'intense polarization that paints political opponents as treasonous enemies' are together driving the violence.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store