Elon Comments On Senators Speech

Well, well, well—Democrats are absolutely losing it over DOGE looking into USAID. And you have to ask yourself: why? What exactly is so terrifying about reviewing how $50 billion of taxpayer money is being spent? You’d think a little transparency would be welcomed, but no, the usual suspects are throwing tantrums in D.C., and the media—shockingly—has lined up to amplify the outrage. Because, of course, nothing terrifies the left more than someone pulling back the curtain on how their bureaucratic empire actually operates.

On Monday, a gaggle of Democrats (outnumbered, most likely, by the reporters eager to lap up their talking points) showed up outside the USAID building, wailing about how outrageous it was that an agency within the executive branch was being held accountable… by the president of the United States. Imagine that. The very idea that President Donald Trump might want to take a closer look at how taxpayer dollars are being thrown around was apparently a bridge too far for the left. The effort to spin this as some kind of outrageous, improper overreach was nothing short of bizarre.

And, of course, leading the charge in this latest episode of Democrat hysteria is none other than Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer, who’s had himself quite the rough week. His attempts to go after Trump have been flopping left and right, from his failed attempt to turn Americans against tariffs (sorry, Chuck, but we’ll take border security over slightly cheaper avocados) to this latest crusade against DOGE. Schumer took to the Senate floor to sound the alarm, warning that this was just the beginning and fretting about what they might target next.

His fearmongering got even more ridiculous when he brought up Social Security, conveniently ignoring that Trump had already said there wouldn’t be any cuts. But let’s be honest—the funniest part of this meltdown was when he suggested DOGE might go after the IRS next. Don’t threaten us with a good time, Chuck. If there’s one agency in desperate need of a deep dive and a major shake-up, it’s the IRS. Why are Democrats so petrified of their spending habits being examined? Maybe because they know what’s lurking in the books.

Schumer’s other favorite talking point? That DOGE represents some kind of “unelected shadow government” running a “hostile takeover of the federal government.” You have to appreciate the irony. The Democrats, the same people who were perfectly fine with unelected bureaucrats running the show while Joe Biden spent four years shuffling around in cognitive decline, are suddenly worried about an “unelected” group in the Executive Office of the President reviewing an executive agency. Funny how that works.

For those keeping score, DOGE is just the rebranded version of the U.S. Digital Service, which Barack Obama originally set up. The only difference now? It’s working under a president who actually wants accountability. But in Schumer’s world, questioning bureaucrats—especially ones controlling tens of billions of dollars—is somehow an assault on democracy. No, Chuck, what’s actually an assault on democracy is an entrenched, unaccountable government that believes it can spend taxpayer money however it pleases without oversight.

Elon Musk wasn’t having any of it and called Schumer out in spectacular fashion, pointing out that hysterical reactions like this only prove that DOGE is directly over the target. Musk put it bluntly: this is our one shot to get things right. Either we dismantle the bloated, unchecked bureaucracy now, or we lose the opportunity forever.

And that’s what this is really about. The establishment is panicking because, for the first time in a long time, someone is shining a spotlight on how Washington actually operates. The rats are scrambling, the narratives are collapsing, and the American people are finally getting a front-row seat to the show. This is it—the moment where the people have a real chance to reclaim control from the permanent D.C. class.

Now or never. And the way the left is screeching, you know we’re onto something big.