https://wallstreetonparade.com/2025/02/elon-musks-doge-appears-to-be-violating-a-court-order-it-has-taken-down-hundreds-of-youtube-videos-that-educate-americans-on-how-to-avoid-being-swindled/


By Pam Martens and Russ Martens: February 21, 2025 ~

Donald Trump loyalists, including Elon Musk and his “Muskrats,” (coders and
techies that are loyal to Musk) have launched an unconstitutional reign of
terror through federal agencies that are critical to the safety and
security of Americans. Musk is the world’s wealthiest man, and foreign
born, with a dubious history when it comes to following U.S. laws.

Musk previously battled in court to obtain a $56 billion pay package at
Tesla. (That’s billion not million.) Tesla is a publicly-traded company and
Musk is its CEO – meaning that under law he owes an oath of loyalty to the
company and its shareholders. Notwithstanding that law, Musk simultaneously
serves as CEO of rocket and satellite company, SpaceX, and controls
numerous other companies, including the social media platform, Twitter,
which Musk has renamed “X.”

In January and February of last year, Musk was profiled in two bombshell
Wall Street Journal articles regarding his use of illegal drugs. The Wall
Street Journal’s January 6, 2024 (paywall) article carried this assessment
of Musk’s drug use:

“The world’s wealthiest person has used LSD, cocaine, ecstasy and
psychedelic mushrooms, often at private parties around the world, where
attendees sign nondisclosure agreements or give up their phones to enter,
according to people who have witnessed his drug use and others with
knowledge of it. Musk has previously smoked marijuana in public and has
said he has a prescription for the psychedelic-like ketamine.”

In October, five Wall Street Journal reporters dropped more bombshell news
that Musk “has been in regular contact with Russian President Vladimir
Putin since late 2022.” In February of 2022, the U.S. placed Putin on a
sanction list in response to his “unjustified, unprovoked, and premeditated
invasion of Ukraine….”

Trump, who received $288 million in political campaign support from Musk in
the last campaign cycle, has now announced that it was Ukraine that started
the war with Russia, making the U.S. look like a fool on the world stage
and among its allies in Europe.

Musk has also been the target of multiple cases brought by the Securities
and Exchange Commission which allege that he violated federal securities
laws at Tesla and Twitter (now called X). See here and here.

Notwithstanding this five-alarm fire history, President Donald Trump has
put Musk and his organizational concoction called the Department of
Government Efficiency, (DOGE, after the meme crypto coin of the same name)
in charge of rooting out fraud, waste and abuse in federal agencies.

In the case of the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (CFPB), Musk and
his pals in the Trump administration tried to kill the whole agency. On
February 7, Musk Tweeted: “CFPB RIP” (rest in peace) with a picture of a
tombstone. That followed a November 27, 2024 Tweet from Musk where he wrote
“Delete CFPB. There are too many duplicative regulatory agencies.”

It is patently untrue that the CFPB is “duplicative.” The agency was
created under the Dodd-Frank financial reform legislation of 2010 to fill
the void that allowed millions of Americans to have their homes illegally
foreclosed and be swindled under tricked-up subprime mortgages that left
the U.S. economy in the worst financial crisis since the Great Depression.
Since its creation, the CFPB has returned more than $21 billion to
defrauded seniors, students, military veterans and other vulnerable
Americans.

On February 1, President Trump fired CFPB Director Rohit Chopra, who had
led the agency for almost three and a half years. Trump then appointed his
newly-installed Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent to serve as Acting
Director of the CFPB. (See Trump’s Hedge Fund Guy Is Now Overseeing the
U.S. Treasury, IRS, OCC, U.S. Mint, FinCEN, F-SOC, and the Consumer
Financial Protection Bureau.)

About a week later, Trump changed his mind about Bessent leading the CFPB
(or Bessent decided he wanted no part of the legally dubious act of gutting
a federal agency created by Congress). So Trump decided to install the
mastermind of Project 2025, Russell Vought, as Acting Director of the CFPB.
(Vought was already serving as Trump’s newly installed Director of the
Office of Management and Budget.)

NBC News got its hands on an email that Vought immediately issued to
employees of the CFPB. NBC News reported as follows:

“Employees were instructed to ‘cease all supervision and examination
activity,’ ‘cease all stakeholder engagement,’ pause all pending
investigations, not issue any public communications and pause ‘enforcement
actions.’

“Vought also told employees not to ‘approve or issue any proposed or final
rules or formal or informal guidance’ and to ‘suspend the effective dates
of all final rules that have been issued or published but that have not yet
become effective,’ among other directives.”

A 404 Error message appears on the front page of the CFPB website and its
social media pages have been deleted (as Musk envisioned back in November)
at X (Twitter), and Facebook.

Multiple federal lawsuits were quickly filed against this unprecedented and
outrageous attack on a federal agency. Notable among them was a lawsuit
brought in U.S. District Court for the District of Columbia by the National
Treasury Employees Union (NTEU). The lawsuit names Vought as the defendant,
in his official capacity as Acting Director of the CFPB, and charges that
his actions violate the separation of powers principles embedded in the
U.S. Constitution that assign specific powers to the legislative branch
(Congress) and specific powers to the Executive Branch (the President).

On February 14, the Judge assigned to the case, Judge Amy Berman Jackson,
issued the following order that included this directive, among others:

“…it is hereby ORDERED that until the resolution of plaintiffs’ motion for
temporary restraining order [Dkt. # 10], which, with the parties’ consent,
will be deemed to be a motion for preliminary injunction, the following
orders shall remain in place:

“It is ORDERED that Defendants, including their officers, agents, servants,
employees, and attorneys, (hereafter collectively, ‘Defendants’) shall not
delete, destroy, remove, or impair any data or other CFPB records covered
by the Federal Records Act (hereinafter ‘agency data’) except in accordance
with the procedures described in 33 U.S.C. § 44. This means that defendants
shall not delete or remove agency data from any database or information
system controlled by, or stored on behalf of, the Consumer Financial
Protection Bureau (CFPB), and the term ‘agency data’ includes any data or
CFPB records stored on the CFPB’s premises, on physical media, on a cloud
server, or otherwise.”

Notwithstanding that federal court order, Wall Street On Parade located the
YouTube page below showing that the entire video playlist for the CFPB has
been deleted. According to the Wayback Machine, that playlist previously
consisted of 361 videos. (See screenshot from the Wayback Machine in second
graphic below.)





Dozens of videos have also been disabled on the official website of the
CFPB. See examples below:

Racial equality in higher education;

How to spot, avoid and report student loan debt relief scams;

Financial Education Resources for Veterans.

In an acknowledgement of just how dangerous this attack on a consumer
protection agency is, Senator Elizabeth Warren, the ranking member of the
Senate Banking Committee, will convene a forum in the Senate Dirksen Office
Building next Tuesday, February 25. A livestream of the event will be
available to the public. (Check back here on Monday for more specific
details.) The forum will focus on the consequences of President Trump’s and
Elon Musk’s efforts to eliminate the CFPB.

Senator Warren has invited Elon Musk to appear at the forum and justify his
actions. Confirmed witnesses include: Andrea Campbell, Attorney General of
Massachusetts; Lorelei Salas, former CFPB Director of Supervision Policy;
and Americans whose savings have been protected by the CFPB.

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