Monday headlines: Carry the zero
Economists say the DOGE purge of federal workers could trigger local recessions, and how bad it gets depends on the scale of the layoffs, which is still unknown. / CNBC
An explainer on how the billions in cuts that DOGE's public ledger claims to have uncovered are riddled with miscalculations and embellishments. / The New York Times [+]
Current and former federal workers launch a website to share anonymous stories about DOGE's efforts to dismantle government agencies. / We the Builders, The Verge
In October, the lawyer who is reportedly now DOGE's general counsel said ignoring the courts would destroy the country. / The Intercept
The FDA is trying to bring back hundreds of workers from the thousands who were cut by DOGE. / The Independent
"Trump is turning off all 8,000 EV chargers at all federal government buildings." / The Drive
"Much of the chaos, lawlessness, and destruction of the past few weeks can be understood as part of the administration's central ideological project," which is to reestablish segregation. / The Atlantic
See also: "Any company whose value is this dependent not on its balance sheet but instead on a shared popular narrative is unusually vulnerable to narrative shifts." How to cost Elon Musk $100 billion. / How Things Work
In the 1920s, the Ku Klux Klan was everywhere, riding an "America First" slogan into the mainstream. They felt unstoppable, until people stopped them. / Dan Sinker
"LANA KIHN flips a switch as the SJWs look on." Leaked pages from Amazon's James Bond script. / Read Max
What's it like for an author to realize the book that took years to research and write is suddenly available as a "summary" someone is selling for $4.99 on Amazon. / 404 Media
One interesting similarity between AI and the public domain is how, used improperly, both are shortcuts that elevate aesthetics over meaning. / It's Nice That
"It is inescapably relevant that Ono was a Japanese woman who demanded to be let into the avant-garde scene in New York just a few years removed from the end of World War II." At the Yoko Ono symposium. / Defector