Anatomy of an AI Coup
Eryk Salvaggio / Feb 9, 2025
DOGE is gutting federal agencies to install AI across the government. Democracy 
is on the line, writes Tech Policy Press fellow Eryk Salvaggio.

Artificial intelligence (AI) is a technology for manufacturing excuses. While 
lacking clear definitions or tools for assessment, AI has nonetheless seized 
the imagination of politicians and managers across government, academia, and 
industry. But what AI is best at producing is justifications. If you want a 
labor force, a regulatory bureaucracy, or accountability to disappear, you 
simply say, “AI can do it.” Then, the conversation shifts from explaining why 
these things should or should not go away to questions about how AI would work 
in their place.

We are in the midst of a political coup that, if successful, would forever 
change the nature of American government. It is not taking place in the 
streets. There is no martial law. It is taking place cubicle by cubicle in 
federal agencies and in the mundane automation of bureaucracy. The rationale is 
based on a productivity myth that the goal of bureaucracy is merely what it 
produces (services, information, governance) and can be isolated from the 
process through which democracy achieves those ends: debate, deliberation, and 
consensus.

AI then becomes a tool for replacing politics. The Trump administration frames 
generative AI as a remedy to "government waste." However, what it seeks to 
automate is not paperwork but democratic decision-making. Elon Musk and his 
Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE) are banking on a popular but false 
delusion that word prediction technologies make meaningful inferences about the 
world. They are using it to sidestep Congressional oversight of the budget, 
which is, Constitutionally, the allotment of resources to government programs 
through representative politics.

Continua qui: <https://www.techpolicy.press/anatomy-of-an-ai-coup/>

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