My dad was quite the joker. Sometimes, driving past a city or state work crew back in the 1950s, he’d roll down the car window and yell, “Got it made!”
That was his way of reflecting the widespread working-class opinion that any government job, even on a swing blade crew along a broiling hot Alabama highway, offered more security and easier working conditions than an employer like the L&N Railroad. Mostly he was right about this.
Over the years, this sentiment has festered into something far more malignant, producing Americans who are not only envious of those with a better deal but are also bent on a self-defeating version of payback. The way in which the Trump administration is handling the reduction of the federal workforce seems aimed more directly at feeding these resentments than assuring the public that it’s really serious about government efficiency.
The firings that have occurred so far appear to have been based on which employees, like those still within their hiring probationary period, would be easiest to fire, not whether their jobs were essential or not.
That paves the way for a process like that described in the Project 2025 document. Jobs being targeted now as part of a bloated bureaucracy will suddenly be discovered to be essential again, but the positions will be filled not by dedicated civil servants but by political cronies. There are legal barriers to this, but it remains to be seen if they will hold.
Lambert here: Or Liberty University, Hillsdale College, or whatever Christianist entity has thrown together an AI cert program.
Those are just the federal jobs we’ve been speaking of. Suppose — and it seems almost inevitable — a second wave of Elon wannabes realizes that state government could also be tempting targets for chainsaw governance.
Whether they are risking their lives, conducting vital research, or loafing on some made-up job, all these people buy groceries and gas and make vital contributions to their communities. They deserve better than to be made the object of political derision as they’re shown the door.

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