Federal workers required to report their daily location, email says
"Unlike the '5 bullets' this is not a strong encouragement. All employees are required to submit this daily information," read an email to election commission staff.

Federal workers required to report their daily location, email says
"Unlike the '5 bullets' this is not a strong encouragement. All employees are required to submit this daily information," read an email to election commission staff.
"Many things are necessary to lead a full, free life--good health, economic and educational opportunity, and a fair break in the marketplace, to name a few. But none of these is more important than the most basic of all individual rights, the right to privacy. A system that fails to respect its citizens' right to privacy fails to respect the citizens themselves. ... At no time in the past has our Government known so much about so many of its individual citizens.
...
Advanced technology has created new opportunities for America as a nation, but it has also created the possibility for new abuses of the individual American citizen. Adequate safeguards must always stand watch so that man remains the master-and never becomes the victim--of the computer."
Radio Address About the American Right of Privacy - Richard M. Nixon, 23 February 1974
https://www.presidency.ucsb.edu/documents/radio-address-about-the-american-right-privacy
Part of this speech is featured in an excerpt from the 1981 NOVA documentary, "Computers, Spies and Private Lives", restored by the Computer History Archives Project (CHAP).
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lvGgeb0RVyY
#Privacy @PrivacyDigest #BigData #USGov #NationalSecurityAgency #NSA #Cryptography #Cryptology #RichardMNixon #RichardNixon #NOVA #CHAP #InformationSecurity #InfoSec
(3/n)
...became the global reserve currency, will now rise and the yield difference to the global average will quite likely never be as large as it used to be.
This means that, from now on, the #USgov will probably need to devote a significantly higher percentage of its (federal) budget to servicing public debt, leaving less and less leeway for discretionary spending. Big Infrastructure or emergency spending, as during the Covid pandemic, will be very...
@karlauerbach If the malicious #USgov exerts power over the ICANN domains such as .org, then I agree that use of #Wikipedia would be seriously impacted. However, if @wikimediafoundation promotes the federated design they already have in place worldwide, then disruption will be mainly confined to the #USA. Their non-profit status is only a USA problem, unless (as I pointed out), they decide to move corporate outside USA.
Current and former #USgov data scientists!
Join @ropensci.org + @openscapes.bsky.social on May 6 for a community support and networking event:
ropensci.org/events/datas...
Co-hosted by former feds (NOAA, NASA, DOE, NSF, NIH + Federal Reserve) to discuss their paths to other sectors. #dataBS
Non-Government Career Paths fo...
It seems that AI is better that this stuff than humans. I asked here, got one answer that seemed unreliable.
So asked Perplexity.ai
What Has Happened to People Fired by DOGE?
Thousands of federal workers were abruptly fired by the Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE), led by Elon Musk, as part of a sweeping initiative to shrink the federal workforce and cut government spending. The affected employees include both probationary workers and others across more than two dozen federal agencies
. The scale of the layoffs is significant: at least 24,000 federal probationary employees were fired, and estimates for total job losses—including buyouts and contractor cuts—range from 100,000 to over half a million in high-layoff scenarios
.
Legal Challenges and Reinstatement
A substantial portion of these firings has been challenged in court. An independent federal oversight agency declared the mass firing of probationary workers unlawful, prompting a federal judge to order the reinstatement of about 16,000 employees. However, the Trump administration has appealed this ruling to the Supreme Court, leaving many workers in limbo as they await the outcome
.
Are They Finding Other Jobs?
Job Market Difficulties
Many of those fired have struggled to find new employment, particularly in the private sector. The job market for white-collar professionals—where most of these federal workers fit—has softened, with employer demand down since the pandemic. Many report repeated rejections, lengthy interview processes, and even resorting to gig work or starting small businesses to make ends meet
.
“Nonstop rejection,” said one former CDC employee. “It’s three rounds of interviews and a writing sample only to get ghosted.” To make ends meet, he started a pressure-washing business
.
Job applications from former federal employees have surged dramatically, especially among those from agencies targeted by DOGE. However, the influx of highly educated candidates into a weak job market has made competition fierce, and opportunities remain limited
.
State Initiatives and Support
Some states are actively trying to recruit these displaced federal workers. For example, New York Governor Kathy Hochul launched a "You’re Hired" initiative to attract former DOGE-fired employees to state jobs, emphasizing the value of their public service skills. Virginia Governor Glenn Youngkin also encouraged laid-off federal workers to seek jobs in the state, highlighting the availability of over 250,000 open positions
.
Uncertainty for Many
Many affected workers are still waiting for legal decisions regarding their potential reinstatement and, in some cases, are receiving severance pay. This uncertainty has delayed job searches for some, while others have begun to reskill or consider career changes due to the challenging employment landscape
.
Summary Table: Fate of DOGE-Fired Workers
Outcome Details
Awaiting Legal Resolution Many are in limbo, hoping for court-ordered reinstatement
.
Struggling in Job Market Facing high competition and low demand for white-collar roles, many report difficulty
.
State Recruitment Efforts States like NY and VA are actively recruiting these workers for public sector jobs
.
Career Changes & Gig Work Some have started small businesses or are considering reskilling due to job market woes
.
Conclusion
Most people fired by DOGE have not yet found stable new jobs. While some are pursuing opportunities in other states or starting over in different fields, a large number remain in a state of uncertainty, awaiting the outcome of legal battles that could see them reinstated to their former positions
. The mass layoffs have created a challenging environment for these workers, both professionally and personally.
https://www.huffpost.com/entry/tesla-first-quarter-results-bad-news_n_6807fbf0e4b05f43aef26b9c
Tesla's First Quarter Earnings Are Out, And They're Real, Real Bad
Courts say the feds can't grep the entire phone system. Which will stop them from doing so for exactly zero minutes.
https://www.404media.co/judge-rules-blanket-search-of-cell-tower-data-unconstitutional/
Also of interest in that NewsMax clip is how the broadcaster referred to Biden’s supposed “flagrant” act of ‘dumping’ immigrants into the country as “treasonous.”
Words get thrown around and the meaning lost, but “treason” used to mean something. It’s a high crime— betrayal of the US and aiding its enemies. The punishment is death.
/3
Whistleblower Blames Musk’s DOGE Goons for ‘Significant Cybersecurity Breach’
It was interesting to see the Fox newscaster simply nod in agreement that Americans’ rights would somehow be protected after they were sent to the prisons without considering that Mr. Yoo did not address the congressman‘s concern of lack of due process that would precipitate the Americans being sent away in the first place.
/6 of 6
“…according to the disclosure and records of internal communications,
members of the #DOGE team asked that their ACTIVITIES NOT BE LOGGED on the
system and then APPEARED TO TRY TO COVER THEIR TRACKS behind them, turning off monitoring tools and manually deleting records of their access — EVASIVE BEHAVIOR that several cybersecurity experts interviewed by NPR compared to what criminal or state-sponsored hackers might do.”
https://www.npr.org/2025/04/15/nx-s1-5355896/doge-nlrb-elon-musk-spacex-security
Notice he does not address the issue of due process. Rather, he says that the US has plenty of prisons and can even build more. And if those aren’t enough, they can send people somewhere else (where of course, the US would run the prisons ;)
#USA #USGov #trump #law #DueProcess #deportation #deportations
From: @dalfen
https://mstdn.social/@dalfen/114343937617510387
Note: John Yoo, who served as Deputy Assistant Attorney General for the Office of Legal Counsel during the George W. Bush administration, has made controversial comments in the past and has skirted being disciplined or even disbarred by his state bar association.
/5 of 6
John Yoo continues:
American officials (would be) in charge of the prison. They’re gonna run them according to American standards. American citizens are going to be governed and protected by the Bill of Rights as they always have been for more than 200 years. …this congressman…can always do something about this if he wants. He can propose legislation. He could have oversight…”
/4 of 6
“First, I don’t know if we need to do that. The United States runs plenty of prisons. There should be plenty of jails (scoffs). If there needs to be more, we should build more, but the main point is, wherever you send them, as long as they stay within the control of the United States governmemt, you don’t have to have any of these exaggerated worries that you just heard… I think unfortunately, from the congressman…
/3 of 6
Fox News Host Martha MacCallum then asks John Yoo, former deputy assistant Attorney General and law professor at UC Berkeley:
“So, the suggestion, at the White House the other day, John, was that Pam Bondi, the Attorney General would look into whether or not there was any legal basis to return Americans— to send Americans, I should say— to an out of country prison. Your thoughts?”
/2 of 6
Fox News host plays a clip (today) of New York representative Richie Torres speaking on CNN about how, without due process, Trump (the Trump admin) could wrongfully label any American as a non-citizen gang member and abduct them in the dead of night, rendering them to a foreign prison to be tortured.
/1 of 6
Trump Wants to Merge Government Data. Here Are 314 Things It Might Know About You.
Elon Musk’s team is leading an effort to link government databases, to the alarm of privacy and security experts.
https://www.nytimes.com/2025/04/09/us/politics/trump-musk-data-access.html