Skip to main content

June 20, 2025

Tech executives implement Yarvin governance model in federal positions

NPR
The Grayzone
Breaking Defense
Fedscoop
NPR
+18

Curtis Yarvin's corporate dictatorship blueprint implemented through Silicon Valley allies

There are no records on official government websites (e.g., congress.gov, federalregister.gov) or in high-credibility outlets (AP, NPR, ABC News) confirming an entity called “DOGE” using AI to purge 30,000+ federal employees or implement Curtis Yarvin’s RAGE plan.

No Supreme Court filings or Federal Register notices document tech executives holding active military ranks or directing defense contracts in a manner that violates civilian control of the armed forces.

Congress retains exclusive 'power of the purse' under Article I of the Constitution; any credible report of frozen, congressionally-approved funding would appear in public appropriations legislation and committee records on congress.gov.

Federal courts routinely block executive actions that exceed legal authority; any significant judgments against politically appointed officials are published on PACER and often covered by reputable outlets like SCOTUSblog.

🤝Civic Action📜Constitutional Law🤖AI Governance💡Technology

People, bills, and sources

Mike Johnson

Mike Johnson

House speaker

James Comer

House oversight chair

Tom Cole

House appropriations chair

Tom Cotton

Tom Cotton

Senate intelligence chairman

Marty Makary

FDA commissioner

Lee Zeldin

EPA administrator

Jim O'Neill

Jim O'Neill

Acting CDC director

Linda McMahon

Linda McMahon

Education secretary

John G. Roberts Jr.

John G. Roberts Jr.

Chief justice

Donald L. Palmer

EAC chairman

What you can do

1

Track appropriations bills and vote-a-rama tallies on congress.gov to see how funding for agencies like FDA, EPA, CDC, and Education is allocated.

2

Contact your U.S. Representative and Senators through their official websites (house.gov, senate.gov) to request oversight hearings or express concerns about executive overreach.

3

Monitor policy updates in the Federal Register (federalregister.gov) for any changes to civil service rules, AI surveillance guidelines, or defense contracting procedures.

4

Use Supreme Court docket information on supremecourt.gov and Legal Information Institute (law.cornell.edu) to follow challenges to executive actions and understand constitutional principles like separation of powers and judicial review.