• PRESIDENT TRUMP
  • RESOURCES
  • FOLLOW
  • CONTRIBUTE
  • JOHN MICHAEL CHAMBERS
    • ARTICLES
    • JMC IN THE NEWS
    • JMC ARCHIVES
  • CONTACT
  • RUMBLE
  • PRESIDENT TRUMP
  • RESOURCES
  • FOLLOW
  • CONTRIBUTE
  • JOHN MICHAEL CHAMBERS
    • ARTICLES
    • JMC IN THE NEWS
    • JMC ARCHIVES
  • CONTACT
  • RUMBLE
SUBSCRIBE
Home > ELON MUSK
64 views 4 min 0 Comment

DOGE Is in Its AI Era

archiescom - May 2, 2025


Elon Musk’s so-called Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE) operates on a core underlying assumption: The United States should be run like a startup. So far, that has mostly meant chaotic firings and an eagerness to steamroll regulations. But no pitch deck in 2025 is complete without an overdose of artificial intelligence, and DOGE is no different.

AI itself doesn’t reflexively deserve pitchforks. It has genuine uses and can create genuine efficiencies. It is not inherently untoward to introduce AI into a workflow, especially if you’re aware of and able to manage around its limitations. It’s not clear, though, that DOGE has embraced any of that nuance. If you have a hammer, everything looks like a nail; if you have the most access to the most sensitive data in the country, everything looks like an input.

Wherever DOGE has gone, AI has been in tow. Given the opacity of the organization, a lot remains unknown about how exactly it’s being used and where. But two revelations this week show just how extensive—and potentially misguided—DOGE’s AI aspirations are.

At the Department of Housing and Urban Development, a college undergrad has been tasked with using AI to find where HUD regulations may go beyond the strictest interpretation of underlying laws. (Agencies have traditionally had broad interpretive authority when legislation is vague, although the Supreme Court recently shifted that power to the judicial branch.) This is a task that actually makes some sense for AI, which can synthesize information from large documents far faster than a human could. There’s some risk of hallucination—more specifically, of the model spitting out citations that do not in fact exist—but a human needs to approve these recommendations regardless. This is, on one level, what generative AI is actually pretty good at right now: doing tedious work in a systematic way.

There’s something pernicious, though, in asking an AI model to help dismantle the administrative state. (Beyond the fact of it; your mileage will vary there depending on whether you think low-income housing is a societal good or you’re more of a Not in Any Backyard type.) AI doesn’t actually “know” anything about regulations or whether or not they comport with the strictest possible reading of statutes, something that even highly experienced lawyers will disagree on. It needs to be fed a prompt detailing what to look for, which means you can not only work the refs but write the rulebook for them. It is also exceptionally eager to please, to the point that it will confidently make stuff up rather than decline to respond.

If nothing else, it’s the shortest path to a maximalist gutting of a major agency’s authority, with the chance of scattered bullshit thrown in for good measure.

At least it’s an understandable use case. The same can’t be said for another AI effort associated with DOGE. As WIRED reported Friday, an early DOGE recruiter is once again looking for engineers, this time to “design benchmarks and deploy AI agents across live workflows in federal agencies.” His aim is to eliminate tens of thousands of government positions, replacing them with agentic AI and “freeing up” workers for ostensibly “higher impact” duties.



Source link

Post Views: 74

PREVIOUS

Trump's budget proposes steep cuts to NIH, health funding

NEXT

RFK Jr. Orders Search for New Measles Treatments Instead of Urging Vaccination
Related Post
April 16, 2025
DOGE shows ridiculous waste of time and taxpayer money in relocating a button on a website
April 20, 2025
Elon Musk is the face of DOGE. But he hasn’t faced a challenging interview
March 28, 2025
Elon Musk’s ‘government efficiency’ team turns its sights to SEC: Report
March 25, 2025
Keying a Tesla in New Hampshire is a class A felony
Leave a Reply

Click here to cancel reply.

The material contained on this website represents the opinion, analysis and/or commentary of JMC, John Michael Chambers and its aggregated content and resources, and is intended to provide the viewer with general information only and nothing should be considered as providing medical, financial, or other advice. JMC, John Michael Chambers strives to deliver wartime updates and opinion commentary that empowers and informs viewers. JMC, John Michael Chambers is dedicated to the rule of law and upholding the U.S. Constitution and does not endorse violence or discrimination in any form. This is NOT an official government or military website. This is not a news network.

  • PRESIDENT TRUMP
  • RESOURCES
  • FOLLOW
  • CONTRIBUTE
  • JOHN MICHAEL CHAMBERS
  • CONTACT
  • RUMBLE
© Copyright 2025 - JOHN MICHAELCHAMBERS.COM