DOGE has traded efficiency for lawlessness



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DOGE ditches efficiency
for lawlessness

We are having the wrong public conversation about federal government “efficiency” and spending cuts. It’s not about efficiency at all. It’s about lawlessness.

I offer the following analogy: If you are concerned about crime in your neighborhood, and you show up at the police station and open your trunk to show them the “suspects” you’ve apprehended, they’re not going to praise your industriousness. They’re going to throw you in jail because vigilantism is very bad. It leads to bodies hanging in trees and mobs with pitchforks and outlaws in the sheriff’s office.

Right now, we shouldn’t be asking whether any of the bodies in trees (DOGE cuts) are really horse thieves (wasteful spending), we should be asking how the outlaws got into the sheriff’s office and how we get them out.

John Biundo
Walnut Creek

Voters bought Trump’s
line about cost of eggs

One of the main reasons people voted for Donald Trump was the price of groceries, specifically, eggs.

Despite inflation being tamed by President Biden, eggs were still a bit higher last November than before the COVID pandemic, which killed over 180,000 needlessly during Trump’s first presidency.  A slim majority voted Republican, for cheaper eggs.

How’s that working for us? Ummm, not so good. Eggs are now twice the price they were when Democrats lost the election. Some blame bird influenza; some blame inflation. Trump’s pick for Health and Human Services, Robert F. Kennedy Jr., is unlikely to control the bird flu since he is anti-vax. If bird flu jumps into the human population, thousands more people will die. You can thank Republican senators who confirmed RFK’s nomination, along with the other incompetent Cabinet secretaries, whose only qualification is to follow Trump down to oblivion.

Republicans’ policies bring cheaper eggs?  You’ve been fooled again.

Bruce Joffe
Piedmont

Trump merely enforcing
law on immigrants

Re: “Trump’s orders are a reminder of WWII Japanese internment” (Page A8, Feb. 16).

President Trump has not declared war on immigrants. It is war upon illegal entries, a crucial distinction. As a legal immigrant and proud American citizen, I deplore illegal entry to our country, while applicants who do it the correct way wait for their quotas to come up.

The president is America’s protector-in-chief. He has a congressional mandate. That “people suffer” is abjectly horrific but of no pertinence to this process. One breaks our laws, one risks capture and prosecution. Criminals break our laws, they suffer, hence innocent families suffer. People suffer.

The comparison to the illegal incarceration of Japanese Americans is irrelevant, albeit a crime to humanity we will long regret.

Robin Hall
Walnut Creek

We must sound alarm
on Musk-Trump ‘coup’

As an 82-year-old elder, I’ve lived through many political crises in this country — but I have never seen an attack on our democracy like this.



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