Thursday, May 28, 2026


Are you missing the trees for the forest?
Peter Thiel co-founded Palantir in 2003 with a stated mission to make Western liberal democracy legible to itself through data, a formulation that contained within it the entire logic of what followed: the conversion of surveillance capacity into governance capacity, and the positioning of private actors as the architects of that conversion.
 
Larry Ellison built Oracle into the world's second-largest software company and then, through the acquisition of Cerner in 2022, into the custodian of the largest integrated healthcare records database in the United States, a position he has leveraged into federal contracts that place Oracle's infrastructure at the center of the government's health, financial, and administrative data architecture.
 
Mark Zuckerberg built the world's largest behavioral surveillance system under the name of a social network, producing a real-time map of human associational relationships, political expressions, and behavioral patterns that government agencies access through legal process, data broker intermediaries, and the structural fact that Meta's platforms are where organizing happens.
 
Elon Musk acquired the platform through which political resistance most visibly organizes, eliminated the content moderation architecture that previously created friction between speech and surveillance, and simultaneously obtained operational access to federal administrative data systems through his role in the executive branch's efficiency initiative.
 
Alex Karp, Palantir's CEO, built the connective tissue: the data integration and analysis platform that takes what Oracle stores, what Meta produces, what X amplifies, and what federal agencies collect, and routes it through a unified analytical architecture whose outputs power immigration enforcement, law enforcement intelligence, child welfare risk scoring, healthcare surveillance, and financial crime investigation simultaneously.
 
These actors compete with each other. They sue each other, outbid each other for government contracts, and position themselves publicly as operating toward different ends. Those conflicts are genuine at the level of short-term and mid-term corporate interest. They are irrelevant at the level of structural consequence.
 
What these five actors share is not a coordination agreement. What they share is a common political project whose success depends on the same conditions: the elimination of meaningful regulatory constraint on algorithmic governance, the federalization of AI infrastructure as a national security interest that places it beyond ordinary democratic accountability, the consolidation of data control under private corporate architectures that governments can access but cannot govern, and the suppression of the organized community resistance that would otherwise impose accountability on that consolidation.
These conditions do not require their cooperation. They require only that none of them act to undermine them, and none of them has.
 
The absence of a single unified corporate entity is not a gap in this architecture. It is a design feature. A merged mega-corporation would create a single point of accountability, a single target for regulatory action, a single actor whose exposure would compromise the entire system. The distributed architecture is more resilient precisely because it is distributed. When Palantir's ICE contracts produce public outrage, Oracle's healthcare data infrastructure continues operating. When Meta faces congressional scrutiny over its surveillance practices, Palantir's law enforcement contracts expand. When Musk's government access generates political opposition, Thiel's political investments work to ensure that the officials responsible for oversight remain structurally aligned with the infrastructure's expansion.
 
The distribution of the system across competing corporate entities, each with its own political relationships, its own public narrative, and its own apparent independence from the others, is what makes the system difficult to name, difficult to challenge, and nearly impossible to dismantle through the accountability mechanisms that democratic governance provides.
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 The Same Families Who Tried to Overthrow FDR Are Running The Government Right Now

A documented trail of money, think tanks, and personnel from the 1933 Business Plot to Project 2025.

 In 1933, a circle of Wall Street financiers allegedly hatched a plan to overthrow Franklin Roosevelt. They didn’t want to kill him. They wanted to keep him in his chair, smiling for photographs, while a puppet official — controlled by the men who paid for the operation — ran the country.

This was the during height of the Great Depression. For the average American, life was one in four men out of work, and the other three terrified they were next. Families lived in shacks made of scrap wood and tar paper. Children went to school hungry. Men walked miles every day looking for work that didn’t exist.


Much like today — the wealthiest 1% owned more than the bottom 40% combined — and these men had the nerve to call Roosevelts ideas dangerous.

Americans were suffering, and close to revolting, and FDR knew it. So, he started to put laws into place to help the average American instead of the ultra-wealthy. And the billionaires were pissed. So they started to scheme. The scheme (known as the Business Plot) failed. The scheme collapsed when the general they recruited refused to play along and reported it to Congress. No one was prosecuted. The ambition, however, never died. 

 That plan took nearly a century to complete. You may know it was “Mandate for Leadership” or “Project 2025.” 

The same families whose fortunes bankrolled opposition to the New Deal — the capitalists who bankrolled an attempted government coup in the 1930s — have funded a network of think tanks, legal societies, and personnel databases that accomplish something the original capitalists could only dream of.

So, to give you some context.

In America, anyone that didn’t live in an industrialists or wall-street financiers family was in a crisis. They were starving to death. So, FDR enacted what was known as the New Deal. This was not one single law, but a collection of programs built around three goals: Relief, Recovery, and Reform. Relief meant getting immediate help to the suffering. Recovery meant restarting the economy. Reform meant changing the rules so it could never get this bad again. 

The Civilian Conservation Corps put hundreds of thousands of young men to work. The Tennessee Valley Authority brought electricity to seven states. The FDIC insured ordinary people’s bank deposits for the first time, so their money was protected. The SEC put the government in charge of watching the stock market. The WPA gave 8.5 million people jobs, and they built roads, bridges, schools, and parks with their own hands. 

And for the worker everything changed. For the first time, the government drew a line in the dirt and said: you cannot be worked to death for nothing.

The new deal gave workers the right to unionize, the 8-hour workday, a minimum wage., the abolition of child labor, and a Social Security check waiting for you if you lived long enough to stop working.

That is why America didn’t revolt. Not because people stopped being angry but because for the first time in a generation, it appeared that the government was visibly, concretely, undeniably on their side. 

This was a direct assault on the idea that the government owed the rich everything and the poor nothing. It helped by putting millions back to work, stabilizing banks, feeding the hungry, and for the first time in a generation, making ordinary people feel like this country actually belonged to them.

The Plot and the People Behind It

The Business Plot, as it came to be known, was not hatched by fringe actors. The men named in congressional testimony (Grayson M.-P. Murphy (a Morgan banker), Irénée du Pont, John W. Davis (J.P. Morgan’s chief counsel), and former Democratic National Committee chairman John Jacob Raskob were among the most powerful financiers in America.

They hated Roosevelt’s New Deal.

When their coup failed, they got up, and decided to try again. In 1934, the same cast founded the American Liberty League, the “respectable” face of elite opposition to the New Deal. The du Pont family provided roughly 30% of its funding.

The League distributed over five million publications, built 345 college chapters, and mounted constitutional challenges to New Deal legislation. They argued that programs like the Wagner Act (that gives Americans the right to unionize) violated property rights and exceeded federal power.

The arguments were sophisticated, but the goal was unchanged… they needed to protect their concentrated wealth from democratic interference. Roosevelt won in a 1936 landslide. The League dissolved, but the donor network didn’t.

Following the Money

What followed was not coincidence but continuity that is documented in foundation tax filings, archival papers, and three generations of overlapping board memberships.

The Foundation for Economic Education, America’s first modern free-market “think tank,” launched in 1946 with trustees and board members drawn from the executive ranks of General Motors, Chrysler, and DuPont.

The American Enterprise Institute, founded as the League was collapsing, carried the same agenda in a more ‘academic’ wrapper. The AEI still exists today — where members lobby for pharmaceutical companies who later “donated” them hundreds of thousands of dollars among other ultra-wealthy corporations.

Interesting Fact: Dr. Sally Satel, the AEI scholar exposed by ProPublica for publishing articles that downplayed OxyContin's role in the opioid crisis while citing research paid for by that company, was later sponsored by Vice President JD Vance's nonprofit, Our Ohio Renewal, which paid for her year-long residency in Appalachian Ohio.

Then came the John Birch Society. Founded in 1958, its charter members included Fred Koch — father of Charles and David — and Harry Bradley, whose foundation would become one of conservatism’s largest funders. Pierre S. du Pont III provided a direct family link across organizations. 

Fred Koch had built refineries for both Stalin and Hitler before becoming a fierce anti-communist; his son Charles held a lifetime JBS membership until 1968.

The Mellon-Scaife line is the most traceable of them all.

Andrew Mellon (Treasury Secretary under three presidents and a Liberty League donor) passed his fortune and his politics down through his family.

His grand-niece’s son, Richard Mellon Scaife, contributed approximately $900,000 to the Heritage Foundation in its founding year.

By 1998, his foundations had given Heritage more than $23 million. His total documented giving to conservative causes exceeded $340 million. Koch, Bradley, and Olin foundations added tens of millions more to Heritage and to the Federalist Society, the organization that moved originalism constitutional theory from the ‘legal fringe” group to the Supreme Court majority.

Fred Koch had built refineries for both Stalin and Hitler before becoming a fierce anti-communist; his son Charles held a lifetime JBS membership until 1968.

The Mellon-Scaife line is the most traceable of them all.

Andrew Mellon (Treasury Secretary under three presidents and a Liberty League donor) passed his fortune and his politics down through his family.

His grand-niece’s son, Richard Mellon Scaife, contributed approximately $900,000 to the Heritage Foundation in its founding year.

By 1998, his foundations had given Heritage more than $23 million. His total documented giving to conservative causes exceeded $340 million. Koch, Bradley, and Olin foundations added tens of millions more to Heritage and to the Federalist Society, the organization that moved originalist constitutional theory from the ‘legal fringe” group to the Supreme Court majority.

  • The Liberty League declared its mission to “defend and uphold the Constitution” and “foster the right to work, earn, save, and acquire property.”

  • The Federalist Society’s stated objectives are “checking federal power, protecting individual liberty and interpreting the Constitution according to its original meaning.”

The same argument. The same families. The same money.


The Vessel

The Business Plot’s fatal flaw was its crudeness. They wanted to take control pay paying 500,000 starving veterans to march on Washington.

What the donor network eventually understood (thanks to Lewis Powell’s 1971 memorandum to the U.S. Chamber of Commerce) was that you don’t need an army. You need a system.

The Heritage Foundation's Mandate for Leadership is a conservative “governing manual” that tells an incoming president exactly what to do and how to do it. It started in 1979 and Reagan was the first president to run with it. He handed copies to his whole cabinet on day one and stacked his administration with the people who wrote it.

Tax cuts, deregulation, shrinking federal agencies it all came from that book. Reagan later called Heritage a "vital force" in his presidency.

The Mandate For Leadership document is a 900-page, department-by-department manual for dismantling the federal administrative state, written by over 350 former officials, ready for a president’s signature on Day One.

The America First Policy Institute has prepared hundreds of additional executive orders. The Claremont Institute provides the legal structure through the Unitary Executive Theory, which argues a president should have total control over the federal workforce and government. No more checks and balances. 

 


The final part is personnel.

Heritage has spent tens of millions building a database of thousands of pre-vetted political loyalists ready to fill the roughly 4,000+ open-positions — many of which the administration has already opened up with DOGE in 2025. The way they do this is through Schedule F. Which is a policy to reclassify 50,000 career civil servants as at-will employees, removable by any president who gives an inconvenient order.

Schedule F is something we first saw during the first Trump administration, and he brought it back with an executive order on day one of the second.

The structure is complete: think tanks write the policy, the personnel database installs the staff, and Federalist Society-vetted judges uphold the result in court. The president provides the electoral mandate and the signature. He doesn’t need to know how the Department of the Interior works.

 

 

  

Wednesday, May 27, 2026

 
A new WIRED investigation exposes how federal agencies, including the DHS and FBI along with fusion centers nationwide, are now tracking what they call “anti-tech extremists.”
The label is broad enough to potentially include ordinary citizens raising concerns about AI job displacement, data centers consuming massive amounts of power and water, and the rapid expansion of unchecked technology.
More than 1,000 pages of internal documents reviewed by WIRED reveal intelligence reports that link public opposition to AI and data centers with “anti-tech violent extremism.”
Indicators flagged in these reports include attending town hall meetings, taking photos near construction sites, participating in local budget discussions, and sharing information online about rising electricity costs or environmental strain.
This monitoring comes as residents in at least 42 states push back against data center projects that strain local infrastructure and drive up energy prices.
Most of these groups operate through legal channels and civic participation.
Yet fusion center assessments appear to lump them in with fringe movements, sometimes drawing loose connections to historical extremists.
The scale of this worries civil liberties advocates.
Law enforcement is documenting protected activities such as public dissent, neighborhood organizing, and criticism of major tech companies.
Experts point out this approach mirrors earlier surveillance efforts that later drew criticism for overbreadth and chilling legitimate speech.
To be clear, any actual violence deserves investigation and prosecution.
But treating widespread, reasonable anxiety about job losses, privacy erosion, and the environmental toll of Big Tech infrastructure as a form of extremism represents a significant shift in priorities.
It suggests that questioning elite-driven technological change could now place individuals on the radar of domestic intelligence efforts.
With AI systems spreading quickly and data centers multiplying across communities, the public has every right to debate these changes without fear of being labeled a threat.
Americans should not have to worry that voicing concerns will land them in threat assessments.
This development deserves close attention and greater transparency from those directing these programs.
As I have said , numerous times over the last fourteen years... The increasing militarization of the police is designed to turn the police force into an army of occupation for the totalitarian take down of our country...


 7 Laws and Standards That Require The United States to Cut Off All Weapons to Israel

Tuesday, May 26, 2026

They're Getting Rich. You're Getting Replaced. And Nobody Is Stopping It.
Let's start with what Elon Musk wants you to believe.
He wants you to believe that artificial intelligence is going to make everyone rich. That when the robots take your job, the government will send you a check. That this is all going to work out fine and you shouldn't worry about it and you definitely shouldn't fight it.
Here's what he's not telling you.
Elon Musk helped elect the politicians who just cut your food stamps. Who just gutted Medicaid. Who just made it harder to qualify for unemployment. The same political movement that spent years telling you government handouts were immoral is now asking you to trust that when AI takes your job, those same politicians will write you a check every month.
Does that sound right to you?
While Musk was reassuring you, the CEO of Anthropic, one of the biggest AI companies in the world, said publicly that AI could eliminate half of all entry level white collar jobs within one to five years and push the unemployment rate to 20%. The CEO of Microsoft AI said most white collar work will be fully automated within the next 12 to 18 months. Standard Chartered bank just announced it was cutting 8,000 jobs and replacing them with AI. In the memo announcing those cuts, they called the workers being eliminated "lower value human capital." (Reuters, May 20, 2026)
Lower value human capital. That's you. That's your kids. That's your neighbor who has worked the same job for 15 years.
These are not fringe predictions from doomsayers. These are the people building this technology telling you exactly what it is going to do. And the investors lining up to buy SpaceX at a $1.5 trillion valuation and Anthropic at its first quarterly profit are not doing it because they think AI is going to make your life better. They are doing it because they think AI is going to make them incomprehensibly rich. (Wall Street Journal, May 24, 2026)
Now here's the part that should make you furious.
Most people hear "20% unemployment" and think about the people without jobs. That's not the whole picture. Not even close.
Here's what 20% unemployment actually means for everyone else. For you.
It means your employer has 50 applications on file for your position the day you think about asking for a raise. So you don't ask. The person next to you doesn't ask either because you've both done the math. It means benefits get cut and you accept it because the alternative is joining the 20% who have nothing. It means mandatory overtime with no extra pay because you're grateful to still be there. Unsafe conditions you don't report. Managers you don't challenge. Abuse you absorb in silence because you have a mortgage and kids and no other options.
When enough people are desperate for work, desperation becomes the market price for labor. Every worker in America takes a pay cut whether they lose their job or not. Every worker loses the one thing that actually gave them power at the bargaining table. The ability to walk away.
That is not a side effect of what's coming. That is the point.
A workforce that can't say no is a workforce that will accept whatever it's offered. Longer hours. Lower wages. Fewer benefits. No unions. No complaints. Just gratitude for the privilege of still being employed while everyone around them drowns.
This is the dream. Not your dream. Theirs.
The billionaire class and the top 10% don't just benefit from AI replacing workers. They benefit from AI threatening to replace workers. You don't even have to fire everyone to break the back of American labor. You just have to make everyone afraid that they're next. Keep that fear alive and wages stay down, benefits stay gone, and nobody makes a sound about any of it.
That's not a conspiracy theory. That's just leverage. And right now every bit of it is shifting away from you and toward the people who already have everything.
Think about your town. Think about the people you know who are already one bad month away from real trouble. Now imagine the job market gets three times harder overnight. Imagine your kid graduates college and finds out the entry level jobs that used to exist for new graduates have been automated away. Imagine your employer knows that for every one of you sitting in that chair, there are thirty people outside who would take it for less. Imagine what that does to your ability to ask for anything at all.
That's not a dystopian fantasy. That's the math. And the people running these companies have already done it.
71% of Americans say AI is moving too fast. Two thirds of Americans do not trust the government to make sure AI is used appropriately. Twice as many Americans are pessimistic about AI as are optimistic. 60% of adults under 30 are worried AI will replace jobs they depend on. The people living in the real world, not the boardrooms, see exactly what is coming. (Economist/YouGov, May 12, 2026. CBS News, May 22, 2026)
So what did Donald Trump do about it?
He scrapped the only executive order that would have created even a voluntary framework for testing the most dangerous AI systems before release. Killed it at the last minute. His reason: he didn't want anything getting in the way of American competitiveness. (NBC News, May 21, 2026)
Translation: he didn't want anything getting in the way of his donors' profits.
The order wasn't even aggressive. It was voluntary. It just asked AI companies to cooperate with the government on testing advanced models before releasing them to the public. That was too much. That was a "blocker." So it's gone.
Meanwhile the most advanced AI model currently in existence has already demonstrated the ability to autonomously discover thousands of severe cybersecurity vulnerabilities in leading operating systems and web browsers. No regulation. No oversight. Just trust us. (NBC News, May 21, 2026)
Pope Leo XIV, the first American pope, issued a sweeping document this week comparing this moment to the Tower of Babel. He said the concentration of immense digital power in the hands of a few private actors must be countered. He said humans risk being reduced to "mere cogs in a system driven toward ever greater efficiency." He called mass unemployment caused by AI "a true social calamity" and demanded robust legal frameworks and independent oversight right now. (Wall Street Journal, May 25, 2026)
The Pope said that.
Donald Trump said it might slow us down.
In the Great Depression, unemployment hit 25%. The suffering was so widespread and so visible that the country had no choice but to respond. We built Social Security. Unemployment insurance. Labor protections. The entire modern American safety net came out of that crisis because enough people were hurting that doing nothing was no longer survivable for any politician.
This time the disruption is coming faster than any of that can be rebuilt. And the people in charge are not building a safety net. They are actively tearing apart what's left of the one we already have, while the same people dismantling it promise you a check that will never come.
20% unemployment. Those are the words coming out of the mouths of the people who built this technology. Not critics. Not alarmists. The builders.
And not one person in Washington with the power to do anything about it is doing anything about it.
You should be worried.
You should be angry.
And the next time a billionaire tells you not to fight this, asks you to trust the process, promises you it will all work out, you should ask them one simple question.
Worked out for who?
Because the math is already done. The money is already moving. The jobs are already disappearing. And the people cashing in on all of it made very sure that the people who were supposed to protect you stepped aside first.
Share this if you think people deserve to know what is actually being planned for their lives.
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Sources: Reuters, May 20, 2026. Wall Street Journal, May 23-25, 2026. NBC News, May 21, 2026. Economist/YouGov, May 12, 2026. CBS News, May 22, 2026.
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THE INVISIBLE MAN
 
What "WE" don't see and the machinations "WE" are unaware of in the dismantling of democracy by the billionaires who will profit off its death thus ours. Russel Vought is alive and well and hard at work. 
 
 
Russell Vought and the Machinery of Post-Constitutional Power
Most Americans could not pick Russell Vought out of a lineup, and that fact should trouble them more than it does. They know the visible men of Trumpism: Trump himself, all appetite and grievance; Elon Musk, the billionaire man-child with federal contracts and a messiah complex; Stephen Miller, forever auditioning for the role of history’s worst hall monitor. These men are recognizable because recognition is part of their function. They draw the cameras. They feed the rage. They turn politics into spectacle, cruelty into content, and resentment into a daily narcotic for people who mistake humiliation for strength.
Vought is different. His camouflage is dullness. He looks like a man built to be forgotten five minutes after leaving a committee room, all suit, binder, and procedural affect. There is no obvious menace in the face, no theatrical depravity, no carnival glare. That is precisely why he matters. Vought belongs to a more dangerous class of political operator, the man who does not need to own the stage because he understands the machinery behind it. He does not have to make the crowd chant. He has to know where the money stops, where the personnel rules bend, where the legal opinion gets routed, where the agency is told to stand down, and where Congress’s command can be slowed until it becomes theory instead of action.
He runs the Office of Management and Budget, a name so lifeless it sounds almost designed to repel public interest. That dullness is protective. OMB is where federal money moves or stalls, where rules are reviewed, where agencies submit plans, where budget execution becomes policy, and where a president’s impulses are translated into instructions the state can carry out. If Trump supplies the appetite, Vought studies the nervous system. He understands that a president does not need to personally understand the machinery if someone else knows which lever to pull. In that sense, Vought is one of Trumpism’s mature forms.
This is where the story becomes frightening. Vought has told the country what he believes, and the country has largely failed to listen because he said it in the language of constitutional theory and administrative power rather than in the language of rallies. In 2022, writing in The American Mind, he declared that America is in a “post constitutional moment.” He argued that the modern administrative state, independent agencies, expert civil servants, and inherited legal doctrines had hollowed out the constitutional order while preserving its vocabulary. He called for the right to become “radical constitutionalists,” a phrase that sounds almost noble until one sees where he intended to place it: inside the office that controls the flow of money, rules, staffing pressure, and agency obedience.
That is the heart of the matter. Vought’s danger does not come from eccentricity. Washington is full of eccentrics with think tank fellowships and footnotes. His danger comes from proximity between belief and control. A man who thinks the country is living in a post-constitutional condition now occupies one of the federal government’s central command posts. He did not merely write about power from a safe distance. He helped write the Project 2025 chapter on the Executive Office of the President, where he described OMB as possessing statutory tools powerful enough to override agency bureaucracies and argued that the OMB director should be “the best, most comprehensive approximation of the President’s mind.”
That sentence should stop the reader cold. The budget director should approximate the president’s mind. In Vought’s theory, OMB becomes less a neutral budget office than a transmission belt for presidential will. Agencies become resistance points. Career officials become obstacles. Legal caution becomes delay. Congressional spending becomes something to be managed through executive interpretation. The boring office becomes the place where ideology learns to act.
Vought did not stumble into that office. He apprenticed for it. Born in New York in 1976 and raised inside the conservative bloodstream of suburban America, he moved through Wheaton College, George Washington University Law School, Republican congressional politics, the Republican Study Committee, Heritage Action, the Pence orbit, Trump’s first OMB, the Center for Renewing America, Project 2025, and finally back into power as Trump’s OMB director in 2025. That path matters because it is the story of a man who learned where government hides its arteries. Apportionments. Rescissions. Deferrals. Personnel classifications. Budget execution. Regulatory review. Agency reorganization. Circular A-11. The vocabulary feels engineered to defeat attention, which makes it perfect for an operator who understands that democratic power often collapses first in places ordinary people never thought to watch.
Most citizens will never talk about apportionments at a kitchen table. They will never wonder whether a federal agency should ask the Government Accountability Office for a fiscal-law opinion. They will never hear “Office of Management and Budget” and think, there is the place where democratic law can be slowed, starved, redirected, or converted into presidential obedience. Vought hears exactly that. He understands that the language of government can be made boring enough to conceal the violence of what is happening inside it. No one storms a barricade over a footnote in a budget circular. No one organizes a protest because a database vanished from a federal website. The public meets the consequence later, when the program closes, the aid disappears, the investigation dies, the benefit stalls, or the person who knew how the system worked has been frightened out of the room.
This is the mistake Americans keep making about authoritarian politics. They expect the dangerous man to look dangerous. Sometimes they get exactly that. Trump is hardly subtle. Miller has built an entire persona out of bureaucratic cruelty with a pulse. Vought belongs to another category. He has no need to be charismatic. He has no need to be famous. He has no need for the crowd to chant his name. His power comes from knowing what almost nobody else knows and caring about what almost nobody else reads.
That knowledge becomes especially alarming when attached to his theory of money. Congress can pass laws all day. It can appropriate funds, authorize programs, create offices, announce reforms, and pretend the machinery will naturally obey. Then the money has to move. The agency has to receive it. The office has to be staffed. The enforcement action has to proceed. The grant has to be released. The inspector has to be answered. The civil servant has to feel secure enough to say no when a political appointee asks for something unlawful. That is where Vought lives. That is why the constitutional fight beneath his career is not abstract at all. It is about the places where law becomes action.
His Project 2025 chapter treats apportionment as an “indispensable statutory tool.” The term sounds harmless because the language of budget administration was never designed to make the blood run hot. Apportionment is the process by which OMB makes appropriated funds available to agencies by time, amount, and purpose. In plain English, it is one of the points where Congress’s decision to spend becomes the government’s ability to act. Vought praised the first Trump administration’s move to put political officials, rather than career staff, in charge of signing off on apportionments. He argued that an OMB director should wield that power aggressively for the president’s agenda and defend it against Congress.
There is the project in miniature. Congress speaks. OMB meters the oxygen.
The larger constitutional fight is called impoundment, another dead word that hides live explosives. Impoundment is what happens when the executive delays or withholds money Congress has enacted. After Richard Nixon abused that power, Congress passed the Impoundment Control Act of 1974 to prevent presidents from treating appropriations as suggestions. Vought rejects that settlement. At his January 2025 confirmation hearing, he acknowledged that the Impoundment Control Act remains “the law of the land.” Asked whether he personally believes the statute is constitutional, he answered, “No, I do not believe it’s constitutional.”
No secret diary is needed. No invented villain origin. The adult record is damning enough. The man running OMB does not believe the law restraining presidential impoundment is constitutional.
The power of the purse is one of the central devices by which a republic prevents one man from ruling alone. Congress controls appropriations because money is command. If a president can decide which funds to release, which programs to starve, which agencies to slow, and which congressional decisions to treat as optional, legislative power becomes theater. The elected representatives may still speak. The executive decides whether their words become action. That is why Vought matters more than many louder men orbiting Trump. Stephen Miller can make cruelty sound like policy. Vought can make power move.
During Trump’s first administration, GAO concluded that OMB violated the Impoundment Control Act when it withheld security assistance appropriated for Ukraine, a freeze that became central to Trump’s first impeachment. ProPublica later reported that Vought recalled being told to keep the money cut off “until we can figure out where it’s going,” and that “all hell broke loose within the bureaucracy.” That phrase is revealing. To people trained to sneer at government, “all hell broke loose within the bureaucracy” sounds like whining from the administrative class. To anyone who remembers how constitutional government is supposed to function, it sounds like the machinery detecting an attempted override.
Vought appears to have learned the pressure point rather than the warning. If the law requires spending, challenge the law. If the watchdog objects, weaken the watchdog. If the public can see the controls, remove the visibility. If career officials resist, make their careers less secure. This is method, not chaos.
The apportionment transparency fight makes that method visible. In March 2025, OMB took down the Public Apportionments Database despite congressional disclosure requirements. GAO wrote directly to Vought that apportionments are legally binding decisions under the Antideficiency Act and therefore “cannot be predecisional or deliberative.” A federal court later rejected OMB’s position and described its theory as an “extravagant and unsupported theory of presidential power.” That phrase has the chill of the bench. A judge looked at the executive branch’s argument and saw presidential power swollen past legal support.
The average citizen will never read that opinion. They will never know the database existed. They will never know what an apportionment does. They may only notice when the program stops, the office closes, the aid disappears, the enforcement action dies, or the person who knew how the system worked is gone. Procedural coercion works because its victims meet the consequence before they understand the mechanism.
Vought’s posture toward GAO follows the same logic. GAO is the congressional watchdog for federal spending, the institutional referee Congress relies on to determine whether agencies are obeying appropriations law. OMB’s 2025 revision of Circular A-11 reportedly characterized GAO as a legislative-branch agency whose opinions are not binding on the executive branch and instructed agencies to avoid seeking GAO appropriations decisions, sending them instead toward executive-branch channels. That sounds technical until translated into ordinary language. The executive branch was telling agencies to stop asking Congress’s referee and route the question back through the executive. The fight was no longer only about one spending decision. It was about who gets to say what the rules mean.
The same appetite for control runs through Vought’s approach to the civil service. A government is made of people. Real people sit inside agencies and tell political appointees what the law permits. They process claims, enforce rules, investigate misconduct, inspect accounts, review grants, and preserve institutional memory against the fever of each new administration. Such people are inconvenient to a movement built around obedience.
Schedule F was the first Trump administration’s attempt to reclassify large numbers of policy-related civil servants into a category with fewer job protections. Government Executive described Vought as an architect of the plan and reported that he sought to designate roughly 88 percent of OMB as Schedule F. In his 2025 confirmation hearing, Vought confirmed that OMB had implemented Schedule F at roughly 90 percent near the end of Trump’s first term, while emphasizing that reclassification was not the same thing as firing.
Fine. Reclassification is not firing. It is the loaded weapon placed on the table before the conversation begins.
The table matters. A protected civil servant can say, “The law does not allow this,” and mean it. A frightened one calculates the mortgage, the health insurance, the pension, the children, the retaliation. What happens inside an agency when 90 percent of your colleagues have been stripped of protection is not the same as what happens when the law changed on paper. The meetings become quieter. The objections become memos instead of refusals. The person who used to say no starts wondering whether saying no is worth the risk. A bureaucracy does not become obedient only when everyone is removed. It becomes obedient when enough people understand what could happen. ProPublica and Documented reported that Vought said, “We want the bureaucrats to be traumatically affected,” and that bureaucrats should wake up unwilling to go to work because they are increasingly viewed as “the villains.” At his confirmation hearing, Vought said he was referring to “weaponized bureaucracies” and said he looked forward to working with career staff at OMB.
The caveat belongs in the record. So does the quote.
“We want the bureaucrats to be traumatically affected.”
Strip the protections. Brand the workforce. Make the professional class feel hunted. Reward the ones who stop resisting. Call the result accountability.
A republic needs elections. It also needs law to survive elections. The civil service exists because the government is supposed to belong to the public across administrations, rather than becoming the private instrument of whoever won the last presidential contest. The system can be reformed, audited, disciplined, and made more responsive. Turn it into a fear chamber and the character of the state changes. Law begins to depend less on text than on the courage of people whose livelihoods have been placed under political threat.
The Consumer Financial Protection Bureau shows what this theory looks like when applied to an agency with real victims on the other side of the paperwork. Trump named Vought acting CFPB director in February 2025 in addition to his OMB role. DOGE personnel arrived at CFPB headquarters the same day. Employees were told to stand down from performing work. Investigations stalled. Enforcement priorities shifted. The internal details require careful attribution, but the public pattern is clear enough: a congressionally created consumer regulator faced stop-work orders, funding pressure, enforcement disruption, DOGE access, and litigation over whether its functions could be dismantled without Congress.
Then came the quiet pardons.
ACE Cash Express is the kind of case that reveals what “standing down” means after it leaves the memo and enters someone’s bank account. In July 2022, the CFPB sued ACE, accusing the payday lender of concealing no-cost repayment plans from struggling borrowers and improperly withdrawing money from consumers’ accounts. ACE was already a repeat offender. In 2014, the bureau had ordered it to pay $10 million for illegal debt-collection tactics, including harassment and false threats of criminal prosecution. The later lawsuit alleged that ACE’s practices generated at least $240 million in reborrowing fees by keeping borrowers in debt and in the dark. On April 30, 2025, the Trump-Vought CFPB voluntarily dismissed the case with prejudice. The company walked. The borrowers did not get a trial, a judgment, or the public reckoning the lawsuit was supposed to pursue.
That was not an isolated disposal. Consumer groups later reported that the Trump-Vought CFPB had dismissed at least 21 public enforcement actions and moved to overturn or reduce penalties in other settled cases, stripping consumers of compensation companies had agreed to pay. The statute was still on the books. The office still had a building. The consumers who were cheated still existed. The enforcement Congress created the bureau to perform had been converted into a list of cases closed with no action.
That is the Vought method in miniature. Leave the statute standing. Disable the institution. Make the courts catch up.
USAID reveals the human edge. ProPublica reported that in a February 2025 OMB meeting about foreign assistance, Vought directed staff to slash foreign aid as deeply as possible. According to that account, staff proposed a 50 percent cut to more than $7 billion in humanitarian assistance, including disaster relief and aid for refugees and conflict victims. Vought was reportedly dissatisfied and asked what would happen with a much larger reduction. When a career official warned that less humanitarian aid would mean more people would die, Vought reportedly replied, “You could say that about any of these cuts.”
Attribute the meeting carefully. Then let the sentence sit.
“You could say that about any of these cuts.”
That is the sound of human consequence being absorbed into budget posture. A budget is never morally neutral. It decides who receives protection, who waits, who disappears from the government’s concern, and who becomes acceptable loss beneath a line item. Foreign aid deserves scrutiny. Waste should be exposed. Programs should justify themselves. That principle does not sanitize a method built around starving, halting, closing, and litigating afterward.
Vought’s institutional path makes the story clearer. After Trump’s first term, he founded the Center for Renewing America, an organization built from the lesson he says he drew from his experience at OMB: the conservative movement needed a more effective fighting apparatus against an entrenched bureaucracy that had resisted the president’s agenda. That statement is almost too useful. Vought left the first administration believing the problem was not Trump’s ignorance, incompetence, or contempt for lawful restraint. The problem, in his telling, was that the machinery resisted. So he helped build the planning shop, wrote the manual, and returned to the control room.
His public financial disclosure maps the ecosystem. It lists outside positions at the Center for Renewing America, Citizens for Renewing America, America First Legal, and other entities, along with compensation including $542,204 in salary and bonus from the Center for Renewing America and additional payments connected to RNC platform work, American Global Strategies, Hillsdale College, and God’s World Publications. This does not prove corruption, and the distinction matters. It proves continuity. The same figure helped lead a think tank devoted to preparing a future conservative administration, helped prepare a party platform, moved through affiliated legal and political networks, authored the Project 2025 chapter on the Executive Office of the President, and returned to OMB.
That is not a conspiracy theory. It is a résumé.
Modern power travels through institutions, legal shops, personnel pipelines, donor networks, think tanks, party platforms, transition teams, and budget offices. Vought’s importance comes from his position at the convergence point. He is the invisible man with visible consequences.
This is why his boringness is so dangerous. The public thinks democracy dies when someone breaks the door. Vought’s record points to another method. Democracy can be weakened when the office behind the door is instructed to stop functioning, when the money never arrives, when the worker with legal memory is removed, when the watchdog is ignored, when the database disappears, when Congress speaks and the executive treats the command as negotiable.
The first Trump administration often looked like appetite without engineering. The second came back with men who studied the failure. Rage needs procedure. Grievance needs staffing charts. Revenge needs budget authority. A president who wants domination requires operators who know where domination can be made legal-looking, slow-moving, and difficult to explain on television.
Vought is that operator.
He has described the country as post constitutional. He has written that OMB possesses tools powerful enough to override agency bureaucracies. He has said the OMB director should approximate the president’s mind. He has rejected the constitutionality of the law that restrains presidential impoundment. His record is tied to Schedule F, apportionment control, GAO resistance, CFPB paralysis, USAID closeout, and a theory of executive power that treats institutional friction as illegitimacy.
The invisible man is invisible only because the public has been taught to look elsewhere.
Look at him.
A man no one knows is standing at a place almost no one understands, holding a theory of power most Americans have never read, inside an office that can decide whether law becomes action or remains paper.
Russell Vought is boring.
That is his camouflage.
What he does is the alarm.
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Addendum: 

Russell Vought's connection to the Heritage Foundation spans over a decade, marked by prominent roles in both the organization and its policy initiatives. 

Key connections and roles include:

  • Heritage Action for America: Vought served as the Vice President of Grassroots Outreach and Policy Initiatives from 2010 to 2017. This organization acts as the lobbying arm and sister organization of the Heritage Foundation, which aims to execute the think tank's policy goals.
  • Project 2025 Contributions: Vought was a prominent contributor and architect to the Heritage Foundation's Project 2025. He specifically authored the chapter detailing the Executive Office of the President, which outlines plans to expand executive power and overhaul the federal bureaucracy.
  • Current Government Role: Following his involvement with the Heritage Foundation, Vought took on prominent roles in the Trump administration, including serving as the Director of the Office of Management and Budget (OMB). 

You can explore his work and policy stances further through the Heritage Action for America platform or read his specific policy chapters directly via the Project 2