“There have been embarrassing accounting errors, lots of public statements that turned out to be false or misleading, or actions slapped back by the courts.”
“The spending savings are so small that they will be undoubtedly overwhelmed by the significant tax revenue losses which result from gutting IRS tax enforcement,” Riedl tells Axios.
The amount of money “saved” 1) won’t come back to the people in any way/shape/form, and 2) cost a helluva lot less than not having it at all. I mean, it’s objectively worse now after being “saved” than it was when it was operating normally.