Posted on 02/07/2025 3:56:22 AM PST by hardspunned
Four young coders sat in Treasury’s basement.
Their screens cast blue light across government desks.
Their mission?
Crack the deep state.
“We’re in,” Akash typed.
“All of it.”
Within hours: $17 billion in waste exposed.
No committees. No approvals. No red tape.
Just four coders with a bunch of laptops.
Moving faster than bureaucracy could react.
By the time resistance drafted its first memo…
Three more systems were already mapped.
(Excerpt) Read more at x.com ...
The cartoonist’s depiction of Samantha Power is right on.
I gave that guy 10 grand to find my ancestor’s account. If I waited a few weeks Musk would have found it for free.
Now I guess this guy goes back to selling watches on the street.
No apology needed. The more threads on this amazing development, the better.
Elon and PDJT need to set someone from DOGE working on the BANKING CONNECTIONS BETWEEN THE CCP, MEXICAN GANGS AND CHINESE TRIADS OPERATING IN VANCOUVER AND TORONTO, CANADIAN BANKS AND JUSTIN TRUDEAU’S GOVERNMENT.
How did Trudeau’s net worth increase from $20 million in 2015 to $600million today? Remember Xi Jinping’s dressing down of True-dolt at the G20 several years ago?
THEN RELEASE THE RESULTS TO THE PUBLIC!
Follow the link, read the whole article
https://eko.substack.com/p/override
OVERRIDE
INSIDE THE REVOLUTION REWIRING AMERICAN POWER
EKO
Feb 05, 2025
The clock struck 2 AM on Jan 21, 2025.
In Treasury’s basement, fluorescent lights hummed above four young coders. Their screens cast blue light across government-issue desks, illuminating energy drink cans and agency badges. As their algorithms crawled through decades of payment data, one number kept growing: $17 billion in redundant programs. And counting.
“We’re in,” Akash Bobba messaged the team. “All of it.”
Edward Coristine’s code had already mapped three subsystems. Luke Farritor’s algorithms were tracing payment flows across agencies. Ethan Shaotran’s analysis revealed patterns that career officials didn’t even know existed. By dawn, they would understand more about Treasury’s operations than people who had worked there for decades.
This wasn’t a hack. This wasn’t a breach. This was authorized disruption.
While career bureaucrats prepared orientation packets and welcome memos, DOGE’s team was already deep inside the payment systems. No committees. No approvals. No red tape. Just four coders with unprecedented access and algorithms ready to run.
“The beautiful thing about payment systems,” noted a transition official watching their screens, “is that they don’t lie. You can spin policy all day long, but money leaves a trail.”
That trail led to staggering discoveries. Programs marked as independent revealed coordinated funding streams. Grants labeled as humanitarian aid showed curious detours through complex networks. Black budgets once shrouded in secrecy began to unravel under algorithmic scrutiny.
By 6 AM, Treasury’s career officials began arriving for work. They found systems they thought impenetrable already mapped. Networks they believed hidden already exposed. Power structures built over decades revealed in hours.
Their traditional defenses—slow-walking decisions, leaking damaging stories, stonewalling requests—proved useless against an opponent moving faster than their systems could react. By the time they drafted their first memo objecting to this breach, three more systems had already been mapped.
“Pull this thread,” a senior official warned, watching patterns emerge across DOGE’s screens, “and the whole sweater unravels.”
He wasn’t wrong. But he misunderstood something crucial: That was exactly the point.
This wasn’t just another transition. This wasn’t just another reform effort. This was the start of something unprecedented: a revolution powered by preparation, presidential will, and technological precision.
The storm had arrived. And Treasury was just the beginning.
THE FOUNDATION
“Personnel is policy.”
For decades, this principle, articulated by conservative strategist Troup Hemenway, remained more theory than practice. Previous administrations spent months, even years, trying to staff key positions. Trump’s first term saw barely 100 political appointees confirmed by February 2017.
Every delay meant another victory for the permanent bureaucracy.
But this time was different.
While media focused on campaign rallies and political theater, a quiet army was being assembled. In offices across DC, veteran strategists mapped the administrative state’s pressure points. Think tanks developed action plans for every agency. Policy institutes trained rapid deployment teams. Former appointees shared battlefield intelligence from previous administrations’ failures.
By Inauguration Day, over 1,000 pre-vetted personnel stood ready—each armed with clear objectives, mapped legal authorities, and direct lines to support networks. This wasn’t just staffing; it was a battle plan decades in the making.
“This is the new normal,” Vice President JD Vance declared from his West Wing office, studying real-time data flows across agency systems. “He’s having the time of his life,” he added, referring to the President’s relentless drive. “We’ve done more in two weeks than others did in years.”
The secret wasn’t just speed—it was precision. Instead of waiting for Senate confirmations, the transition team prioritized non-Senate-confirmed positions. While Democrats prepared for traditional confirmation battles over cabinet posts, an army of aligned personnel was already moving into place. Strategic positions were identified. Legal authorities were mapped. Support networks were established.
“We don’t have a lot of time,” the President reminded his team daily. “Four years is a lot of time in political life but it’s not a long time in real life.”
This urgency drove innovation. When DOGE’s young coders breached Treasury’s payment systems, pre-positioned legal teams neutralized resistance within hours. When career officials tried revoking system access, they discovered DOGE’s authority came from levels they couldn’t challenge. When leaks surfaced, rapid-response units fed counter-narratives to alternative media almost instantly.
“When you look at the people surrounding the president,” Vance noted, “we’re trying to make it sort of easy for him to do what he wants to do in government. When you have the entire team firing on all cylinders you can get a lot done.”
The permanent bureaucracy never saw it comin
Better question:
Why is the irs interfering with fiscal transparency involving foreign royal family?
A new Terminal List (with a tip of the hat to Jack Carr)
“ USPS should be on their list!”
slAmtrak?
“ A NIGERIAN was responsible for OUR $6 TRILLION DOLLARS and HOW IT IS ALL SPENT!!”
I wonder if this is the same guy who has been emailing me for years. I thought it was a hoax!
A prince?
Proud to say FR was in the 'know' from the gitgo. Here's one from July 23, 2020:
President Trump fired ALL of the Inspector Generals early on.
Just what were the Inspector Generals doing with their Budget and staff????
Absolutely legit. I was a minor programmer in my youth; these kids are light years ahead of anything I ever did. DJT and Elon had this planned out for several years beforehand.
I’m so thankful to be alive to see all of this happening. I just can’t believe how quickly the deep state is being exposed and dismantled.
"Hey, you suckers, you got a Nigerian handling $6 trillion of your tax dollars."
Every expenditure must be examined!
“Pull this thread,” a senior official warned, watching patterns emerge across DOGE’s screens, “and the whole sweater unravels.”
EXACTLY!!!
NEXT STEP THERE NEEDS TO BE PROSECUTIONS AND JAIL FOR THOSE WHO
STOLE OUR , REPEAT OUR MONEY.
JAIL !!!!
News stories that are told like they are novels bother me. It’s a writing style used by women. I seriously doubt that potholes in Springfield have anything to do with USAID. It’s just too cute. More likely a coincidence or maybe someone got a fire lit out of fear of being found useless. Either way it’s just too quick for really just one week.
historical fiction
much like The Davinci Code
( most dont see the “ fiction” on the spine of that book )
many historical facts as skeleton and fiction used to flesh out the story line
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