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On the Swamp, Cronyism, and Gaming the System
Townhall.com ^ | December 17, 2019 | Derek Hunter

Posted on 12/17/2019 3:19:23 AM PST by Kaslin

President Donald Trump was elected on the pledge that he would “drain the swamp.” The swamp, as has been painfully obvious since day 1, has been fighting back. But not all of the swamp that thrives in Washington, DC, is in the intelligence community or actively working against the president. Much of it is institutional, bureaucratic, and more interested in scamming taxpayers out of as much money as possible.

This part of the swamp, likely the largest part, operates under the radar, in offices with titles you’ve never heard of, overseen by the staffs of deputy assistant under secretaries of some insignificant segment of a department no one cares about. Programs started to address some form of perceived problem or correct what was declared an injustice, have long outlived their usefulness or need. 

Still, they thrive. As Milton Friedman famously said, “Nothing is so permanent as a temporary government program.”

Not all these swampy bureaucracies were meant to be temporary, of course, but they were created to address something or other that, presumably, once solved, would mean they were no longer necessary. But no one in Washington will ever admit what they do is unnecessary, just as everyone with a specialty will ever admit their area of expertise is unimportant. And no one with a job will come close to admitting to themselves that that job should not exist. 

But countless jobs should not exist, countless programs should not exist, and even more recipients of government aid should not be getting it.

It’s not just “Lobster Boy,” the surfer dude who collected food stamps he used to buy lobster. While Jason Greenslate, the lobster boy himself, got a lot of attention, well-deserved attention, he’s small potatoes compared to the gaming of the system that goes on in government.

I was reading the other day about the IT companies with some lucrative government contracts providing services for Job Corp., a Johnson-era social program that trains young people for tech jobs. The contract to provide IT support was at one time held by Rodney P. Hunt, a celebrated minority government contractor, and his company RSIS. When that company was sold due to some “issues,” stakeholder Ron Trowbridge took his payout and formed a new company, T&T, placing his daughter at the helm making it a woman-owned company, and therefore eligible to receive special government set asides. 

And the new, woman-owned T&T subsequently acquired a disabled veteran-owned business, Altech, expanding the possibilities for obtaining even more government set aside contracts with this additional, government favored designation. But there’s more. Another company was also introduced into the mix when Enlightenment Capital purchased T&T, thus bringing those government approved contractor statuses under their umbrella. 

The link between all these companies is one employee, Christine Brandell, who, somehow, has managed the contract on behalf of these businesses and Linda Estep, a Labor Department information technology director. They reportedly “are really close. They go way back at least 10 years.” To boot, the terms of contracts seem to be under “generous” terms with lax reporting requirements. 

As was reported over at American Greatness, “Granted, this kind of seeming cronyism, race hustling, and inefficiency is par for the course in the federal government and so this story isn’t exactly news. Yet as an example of what passes as ‘good enough for government work,’ this deal appears to have it all. As such it is one of the most visibly representative cases in some time of the very comfortable rot at the core of the federal contracting system.”

The Times of Israel, reporting on the same story, concluded, “How does this system fare for actual small businesses, the kind started by middle class Americans who are minorities, women or service-disabled veterans? Especially when it would seem that the services that are provided have serious problems. Not good. Small business government cronyism is alive and well.” 

Perhaps it’s because I’m naturally cynical, or that I’ve been in DC for 18 years (which certainly doesn’t help with the cynicism), but this sort of cronyism and gaming the system is not only common, it’s inevitable. 

When you have a gigantic federal government distributing trillions of tax dollars, people will always game the system. The government is too big to keep track of itself, or to know when it’s being played. And in most cases, it’s not being played – because most of this is perfectly legal, no matter how wrong it looks. 


TOPICS: Culture/Society
KEYWORDS: cronyism; swamp

1 posted on 12/17/2019 3:19:23 AM PST by Kaslin
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To: Kaslin
I began to learn about this starting back in 1994. And here is the end result:

Ecclesiastes 1:18 Because in much wisdom there is much grief, and increasing knowledge results in increasing pain.

2 posted on 12/17/2019 3:28:29 AM PST by MeneMeneTekelUpharsin (Freedom is the freedom to discipline yourself so others don't have to do it for you.)
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To: Kaslin
I don't think that any normal American could understand the breadth and depth of the dysfunction in Washington, DC. It is like something out of a science fiction movie.

About 80% of government employees are semi-literate. They might have some BS (I DON'T MEAN BACHELOR OF SCIENCE) degree in "African" studies. My college friend used to work in a top secret area of the Pentagon. The MPs guarding this area were usually asleep at their post. For sh*ts and giggles my friends would write on an index card "Wake up you lazy n… !", and flash that as their ID and walk in.

People are having sex in the stair wells. Someone is pushing a shopping cart full of liqour around and selling it. 80% of the workers have their heads down on their desks sleeping.

The FCC library used to be located on "K" street, then they moved down it down near NASA headquarters by L'Enfant Plaza. You wouldn't believe how it had been destroyed after the older white people retired. It was decimated. It looked like a library from Uganda or some other third world country.

No one was there when I walked in. There was a sign on the desk that said "If no one is at this desk, please walk into the adjacent room for help." I walked into the adjacent room and an angry black woman tried to rip me a new one for walking into that room. She didn't even realize the sign on her desk.

3 posted on 12/17/2019 3:58:25 AM PST by Governor Dinwiddie (Guide me, O thou great redeemer, pilgrim through this barren land.)
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To: Kaslin

Remember reading here about WH strategy of emphasizing hot button issues in 2020. Outlining the stark difference between Trump’s populist agenda and Democraps big govt rape of the taxpayer and our culture. Especially on immigration.

It is obvious, or should be that highlighting the capture of Democraps by big govt interests needs to be front and center in the campaign. Deep state weaponization of State, CIA, FBI, IRS is just part of it.

Bureaucratic weaponization of other agencies to protect their sweet deal at taxpayer expense. So huge that even a safe political approach of avoiding SS, Medicare, Medicaid political 3rd rail can be used.


4 posted on 12/17/2019 5:11:04 AM PST by bakkentom
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To: Governor Dinwiddie

I don’t think that any normal American could understand the breadth and depth of the dysfunction in Washington, DC........... Understatement of the Year!!!!!!!

Seeing it firsthand, as long as Congress and the agency bureaucrats allow big conglomerates, hedge funds, equity funds to snatch up businesses and win contracts, while at the same time greasing all the palms they need to grease in DC, this will never change.

But, if you’re the guy that started something from the ground up and an equity fund comes to you and makes you an offer, it’s hard not to take it. One, because they’re going to offer you something outlandish, to get you out of the way. Two, they’ll use their influence with Congress and the agency bureaucrats to make your life miserable and/or run you out of town, forcing you into a fire sale.

I’ve seen it happen, firsthand. One of the biggest issues with this is, there’s no more accountability. When one of these firms takes over a company and a contract, while at the same time they’re messing up, they’re dumping money into a campaign.

It’s just Wall St gimmicks to fill certain pockets and screw the competition and taxpayer. I could go on for a while.


5 posted on 12/17/2019 5:28:02 AM PST by qaz123
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