#GovernmentAccountabilityOffice
Let’s just say neither the print media nor the cable/networks have distinguished themselves in reporting here.
GAO should’ve been mentioned in the first paragraph of every story since DOGE came onto the scene.
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#GovernmentAccountabilityOffice
Let’s just say neither the print media nor the cable/networks have distinguished themselves in reporting here.
GAO should’ve been mentioned in the first paragraph of every story since DOGE came onto the scene.
doomed by the narrative (i'm a monster of the week that's changed my ways and the heroes have agreed to let me live in peace. but this episode hasn't had a mech fight yet)
Characters of the Marvel Cinematic Universe ↳ Madame Gao
Mali Empire's Golden Age
The Mali Empire, founded by Sundiata Keita around 1240, grew into West Africa’s largest empire through strong leadership and military might. Under Mansa Musa I, it reached its peak with vast wealth from controlling critical trade routes. This empire became famous for its riches, spread of Islam, and renowned learning centers like Timbuktu, before declining in the 15th century.
Key Facts
Founded: c. 1240 by Sundiata Keita after defeating the Sosso kingdom
Peak ruler: Mansa Musa I (1312–1337), famed for immense wealth
Wealth source: Controlled trade in gold, salt, copper, ivory, and slaves
Cultural hub: Timbuktu became a center of Islamic learning
Religion: Rulers embraced Islam; rural populations mostly remained animist
Fall: Declined after civil wars and rise of Songhai Empire, ending around 1645
Historical Context
The Mali Empire rose in a time when West Africa’s trade routes via the Sahara and Niger River flourished. Sundiata’s unification enabled expansion, while Mansa Musa’s reign benefited from the empire’s control of key commercial networks that linked North and West Africa.
Historical Significance
Mali set a historic example of powerful centralized governance blending military strength with diplomacy. Its wealth attracted Islamic scholars and traders, turning West Africa into a vital link in trans-Saharan trade and intellectual exchange. The legacy of cities like Timbuktu endures as symbols of medieval African civilization at its height.
Learn More: Mali Empire
Baihuzu
Gaolentine's day💕
It's pretty easy to cut $2 trillion from the federal budget, actually
Picks and Shovels is a new, standalone technothriller starring Marty Hench, my two-fisted, hard-fighting, tech-scam-busting forensic accountant. THIS IS THE LAST DAY to pre-order it on my latest Kickstarter, which features a brilliant audiobook read by Wil Wheaton.
If Elon Musk wants to cut $2t from the US federal budget, there's a pretty straightforward way to get there – just eliminate all the beltway bandits who overcharge Uncle Sucker for everything from pharmaceuticals to roadworks to (of course) rockets, and then make the rich pay their taxes.
There is a ton of federal bloat, but it's not coming from useless programs or overpaid federal employees. As David Dayen writes in a long, fact-filled feature in The American Prospect, the bloat comes from the private sector's greedy suckling at the government teat:
https://prospect.org/economy/2025-01-27-we-found-the-2-trillion-elon-musk-doge/
The federal workforce used to be huge. In 1960, federal employees were 4.3% of all US workers; today, it's 1.4%. Zeroing out the entire federal payroll would save $271b/year (while beaching the US economy!), a mere 4% of the federal budget.
On the other hand, zeroing out the budget for federal contractors would save over a trillion dollars – the US spends 4 times more on private sector contractors than it does on its own workers, and while some of those contractors are honest folks giving good value for money, the norm is for federal contractors to pick the public's pocket and then use the proceeds to lobby for more fat contracts.
One key job we ask our federal employees to do is root out private sector fraud in federal contracting. We should hire more of these people! Private contractors steal $274b/year from the public purse – nearly enough to pay for all the employees in the federal government:
https://www.gao.gov/assets/gao-23-106285.pdf
Musk doesn't know any of these, and he doesn't care to know. As Dayen writes, he's doing "policy by anecdote." Take Ashley Thomas, the director of climate diversification for the US International Development Finance Corporation. Musk sicced a mob on her, decrying her for doing a "fake job" that was somehow related to "DEI." But Thomas's job isn't employment diversification – it's crop diversification.
If Musk wanted to run DOGE as a force for waste-elimination, he wouldn't be attacking the Corporation for Public Broadcasting and PBS (whose budget accounts for 0.012% of federal spending). He wouldn't be attacking federal fiber subsidies (he's mad that he can't get more subsidies for his dead-end satellite service that caps out at one ten-millionth of the speed of fiber). He wouldn't be attacking high-speed rail (which competes with his Tesla swasticars). He wouldn't be fighting with the SEC (which defends the public from costly stock swindles, which is why they've been investigating Musk for seven years).
He could, instead, go after private sector Medicare waste. 33 million seniors have been suckered into switching from federally provided Medicare to privately provided Medicare Advantage. Overbilling from Medicare Advantage (whose doctors are ordered to "upcode" patients to generate additional bills) costs the public $83b/year:
https://www.medpac.gov/wp-content/uploads/2024/03/Mar24_ExecutiveSummary_MedPAC_Report_To_Congress_SEC.pdf
Medicare Advantage patients are, on average, healthier than Medicare patients (Medicare Advantage giants like Unitedhealtcare cream off the cheapest-to-service patients). Yet, this healthy cohort costs more to treat than their sicker cousins on the public plan – the fraud costs us about 11-14% of the total Medicare bill, and we could save $140b/year by zeroing that out:
https://pnhp.org/system/assets/uploads/2023/09/MAOverpaymentReport_Final.pdf
Zeroing out Medicare Advantage overbilling would pay for "an out-of-pocket spending cap, a public drug benefit, and dental, hearing, and vision benefits" for every Medicare patient with tens of billions to spare.