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June 20, 2025

Tech executives implement Yarvin governance model in federal positions

NPR
Fedscoop
NPR
Fox News
Food & Water Watch
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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

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.