This post has been de-listed
It is no longer included in search results and normal feeds (front page, hot posts, subreddit posts, etc). It remains visible only via the author's post history.
I've been digging into potential cabinet picks and policy plans for this second Trump administration, and it's obvious the strategy is to bring in outsiders with real-world experience and reformist gritāover the usual career politicians and bureaucrats.
In the last 48 hours, hereās what weāve seen floated:
- Pete Hegseth as Secretary of Defense: A decorated veteran with nearly two decades of service, including tours in Iraq and Afghanistan. He's loud and clear about focusing the military on combat readiness, recruitment, and moraleālike itās supposed to be.
- Tom Homan as Border Czar: Former acting ICE director known for his tough-as-nails immigration enforcement stance. His mission? Actually secure the border and tackle crime, drug trafficking, and human traffickingāgo figure.
- Elon Musk and Vivek Ramaswamy: Tapped to streamline federal agencies, slash red tape, and cut bureaucratic waste. Efficiency meets disruptionāsounds like a show worth watching.
So, this signals a shift toward prioritizing efficiency, accountability, and ditching the politically motivated appointments.
But hereās the big question:
- Will bringing in outsiders shake things up for the betterā?
- Can leaders from the private sector or non-traditional backgrounds actually pull off positive change?
- Or will their lack of political āseasoningā make federal agencies even harder to steer??
And what about the impact on national security, immigration, and government transparency?
Debates about government overreach and inefficiency aren't going anywhere. Maybe it really is time for a shake-up. So, will this overhaul bring a freer, safer, more prosperous Americaāor just more chaos?
Subreddit
Post Details
- Posted
- 2 months ago
- Reddit URL
- View post on reddit.com
- External URL
- reddit.com/r/economicCol...