This article is written by James Hayton, a professor at a business school focused on "innovation" and "entrepreneurship", and who received funding from the Nuffield Foundation, founded by William Morris, one of the largest financiers of the British fascist movement.
Just to be clear about the ideological commitments of the author and his financiers. I would suggest taking this article with a lot of skepticism.
I mean, he knows how to gut things he doesnāt think are important.
Thatās not efficiency, thatās just doing less stuff. Efficiency is when you do the same stuff but with lower cost and the same outcomes. Thatās not what musk does.
His approach was essentially "If I don't know what you do, you're fired." Failing to realize the flaw in "not knowing what someone does" is between his own two ears.
A better question would be do you have any examples of him actually creating efficiencies? I don't mean this in a condescending way but he did do a great job with Tesla but basically no where else. Every time he goes out of his wheelhouse it seems to end in disaster? Honestly I don't follow him but it's impossible not to hear about him. So can you elaborate on what his successes were and how'd that translate into making the government more efficient?
Wow, that was an incredibly out of touch and frustrating thing to read. The author has no idea what theyāre talking about.
in a highly polarised US political landscape, the anguish about his governmental role may be little more than a knee-jerk reaction from the millions of people whose side he did not choose.
No, itās a reaction to genuinely absurd proposals for how to save money. For example, if they were able to successfully fire every single federal employee, it would save the government just over $100 billion. That money goes to pay the salaries of around 1.5 million federal employees. Thatās nothing compared to the entire military budget, for example. So, even accomplishing their goal of firing as many civil servants as possible would save very little money in the scheme of things. All it would accomplish is ruining many basic services that people rely on every day to live a relatively safe and healthy life.
But what this article most glaringly ignores is that this Government Efficiency talk is disingenuous from the start. Itās not about efficiency, itās about gutting as much of the government as possible so it breaks. Thatās what they want, and theyāve been quite open about it.
I hate Elon Twitter actions, but Elon actually cut a lot of their costs without any actual significant losses of quality.
I don't know what exactly is Elon stand on spending on moderation on the platform(there is a lot of pirated content there). I really don't know if he removed moderation to have a better control and more freedom to do what he want or he did it to only cut costs.
In all the cases, you got my point.
Just because I hate him, doesn't mean I should criticize everything he ever did in life.
It's ok to have a balanced view on people you love or hate.
He cost cut dual factor authentication because he doesn't understand the need for it, then made it premium only? Will that help with the bot problem Mr. Musk?
Honestly I think it's just a make-work job Trump gave them in his transactional sort of way. I think he dislikes Musk on a personal level (I have no evidence, I just presume that they have clashing egos and personalities.) I wouldn't be surprised if they have a public falling out in which Musk gets mad that he isn't important enough in the admin and badmouths Trump.
I worked at twitter when Musk acquired it. He asked everyone to print out their code. Its one of the stupidest things I have heard anyone say at work, ever. My code would be a stack of paper taller than me, mostly white space or generated code. No one would ever read such a thing, or be able to look through it. Its pathologically stupid. He's just a rich idiot who people work around, not a leader of any sort. Everything at Twitter is broken now. Thats what he will do to ythe government too.