Federal workers forced to return to offices by Donald Trump’s administration are showing up to facilities lacking desks and equipment allowing them to do their jobs.

  • Linktank
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    4 days ago

    It’s almost like the leaders are completely incompetent

    • BenLeMan@lemmy.world
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      4 days ago

      At running a government efficiently? Yes. At running it into the ground? Not too shabby.

      Now what are they trying to achieve?

  • TaiCrunch@sh.itjust.works
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    4 days ago

    Funny that the executive order directs a return to office with a nearly non-existent timeline, specifically saying that everyone has to have a desk and a place to sit and work without resorting to extreme measures.

    Almost as if this whole thing was extremely short-sighted. But they wouldn’t do that, would they? And surely not dozens of times within the span of a week.

    • snooggums@lemmy.world
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      4 days ago

      I assume part of the plan is to fire a number of people equal to the number who don’t have desks by saying that there simply isn’t enough office space for them to work.

      That would follow the Republican ‘cause a problem, then blame the problem to justify the horrible shit you wanted to’ strategy that their voting base apparently loves. It worked when they cut taxes to justify spending cuts and whining about the immigration problems they caused and all of the other shit they do.

  • meowmeowbeanz@sh.itjust.works
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    4 days ago

    The federal desk shortage is bureaucratic theater at its finest. Trump’s admin resurrecting in-office mandates without infrastructure proves this isn’t about productivity—it’s about control. The propaganda machine spins “lazy remote workers” while FEMA staff fight for desks via coin toss. Peak bureaucratic absurdity when auditors sit computerless in halls, pretending busywork matters.

    Decades of remote infrastructure tossed for performative authority. My self-hosted homelab hums smoother than their 40-mile commutes for paperwork. Digital rot festers while they cling to fax-era rituals. If collaboration were the goal, they’d modernize—not chain teams to dead offices.

    The lesson? Self-hosted resilience beats centralized decay. Decentralize, encrypt, automate. Let the empire of empty desks crumble. We’ll be coding in the ashes.