SSA, VA, Medicare, Medicaid, SNAP, and HUD Are Under Attack—Here’s Their Plan
This isn’t just about cuts. It’s a coordinated dismantling—pushing public care into corporate hands while stripping away the support systems millions depend on to survive.
Once you’ve read this and understand their playbook, read The Playbook for Resisting a Safety Net Collapse and learn ours.
This is huge—and it’s not meant to be digested in one sitting. But breaking it up would risk losing the full picture of how deeply interconnected this dismantling truly is. I’ll release shorter breakdowns soon for quick reference, and a strategy + action playbook is coming.
I will never put any of this work behind a paywall. If you learn anything from this, I only ask that you engage with it and share it. The more people who see this, the stronger we become.
I can’t offer comfort—only clarity. But clarity is power. As long as we’re reactive, we’re predictable. As long as we’re predictable, they hold the power. That’s the game.
But seeing this—naming it, refusing to look away—is already an act of defiance. They rely on silence. They rely on people looking away. They rely on fear turning into paralysis.
Refusing to let that happen is resistance.
The Trump administration is waging an all-out assault on America’s social safety net, using Project 2025 as a blueprint to dismantle the programs that protect millions of seniors, disabled individuals, low-income families, veterans, and caregivers.
This isn’t just about “budget cuts” or “fiscal responsibility,” it’s a wealth transfer, forcing public benefits into corporate hands while millions lose access.. It’s a manufactured collapse, engineered through mass layoffs, benefit restrictions, and privatization schemes designed to push desperate people into for-profit alternatives that will exploit them.
This isn’t about cutting government waste. It’s about destroying public trust in government services so corporations can step in and profit.
Every attack is a test of what we’ll ignore—and the only way to win is to refuse to ignore any of it.
This strategy follows a clear and deliberate pattern:
Break the system – Defund, understaff, and overcomplicate public services so they fail.
Erode public trust – Convince Americans that these programs are unsustainable or corrupt.
Manufacture a crisis – By making benefits harder to access, millions will suffer.
Introduce privatization as the only solution – Once desperate enough, the public will accept corporate-run alternatives.
This is not speculation. The same economic playbook has been used before—from the UK’s austerity disaster to post-Soviet Russia’s economic collapse—always benefiting the wealthy while leaving millions impoverished.
Why Are They Doing This?
The Corporate Profit Motive
Public benefits represent trillions in potential corporate profits—and billionaires want control. This is not about budget cuts or efficiency. It is about redirecting public funds into private hands while leaving millions vulnerable.
Social Security privatization would push retirees into high-fee investment accounts, making Wall Street trillions while exposing workers to market volatility.
Medicare, Medicaid, and VA services privatization would force people into corporate-run healthcare plans, where profit incentives mean higher costs and more denied claims.
Housing assistance cutbacks fuel gentrification and real estate speculation, enriching developers while displacing low-income families.
Food assistance rollbacks drive up profits for predatory lenders and payday loan companies that exploit financial insecurity.
From for-profit healthcare to financial speculation in retirement funds, every cut to public programs is an opportunity for corporations to extract wealth—from seniors, veterans, the disabled, and working families. And nowhere is this clearer than in Wall Street’s direct push to privatize Social Security and public pensions.
Wall Street’s Privatization Playbook: Turning Safety Nets into Profit Streams
While Project 2025 is the political engine behind dismantling America’s social safety nets, Wall Street is positioning itself as the financial beneficiary. The end goal isn’t just cutting programs—it’s replacing public benefits with private, profit-driven alternatives that generate billions for investment firms while forcing Americans into greater financial precarity.
How Wall Street Profits from Privatization:
Seizing Social Security Funds – Wall Street firms, including BlackRock, Vanguard, and private equity giants, manage trillions in retirement assets—and they want control of Social Security’s $2.7 trillion trust fund. By manufacturing a crisis and pushing privatization, they can divert public retirement savings into high-fee private investment accounts, turning Social Security from a guaranteed benefit into a speculative asset.
Raising the Retirement Age – BlackRock CEO Larry Fink has already called retiring at 65 “crazy,” conditioning the public to accept later retirement as inevitable. This delays benefit payouts, forces more workers into private investment plans, and ensures Wall Street continues collecting fees on retirement savings for longer.
401(k) Expansion & Pension “Reforms” – Wall Street has aggressively lobbied for the replacement of guaranteed pensions with 401(k)s, shifting investment risks onto workers while securing long-term profits for asset managers.
Public Pension Fund Takeover – State pension funds, including CalPERS—the largest public pension system in the U.S.—are already being pulled into this fight. Financial firms like BlackRock and Vanguard manage trillions in public retirement funds, lobbying for “reforms” that shift pensions into riskier private equity and hedge funds. This allows financial firms to collect massive fees while pensioners bear the risks of underperformance.
The ERISA Loopholes – The Employee Retirement Income Security Act (ERISA) was originally designed to protect pensions from reckless financial practices. But Wall Street lobbying has carved out regulatory loopholes that allow pension funds to be funneled into risky investments with little oversight. These same loopholes will be exploited if Social Security is privatized—turning guaranteed retirement benefits into volatile, profit-generating assets for financial firms.
The dangers of privatizing public retirement funds are not hypothetical—we’ve seen this play out before.
The 2008 financial crisis was a test run. Leading up to the collapse, major banks and hedge funds gambled with high-risk mortgage-backed securities, extracting record profits while creating a bubble they knew would burst. When the inevitable crash came:
Americans lost $2.8 trillion in retirement savings in 2008 alone. 401(k)s and pensions that had been forced into Wall Street investments suffered catastrophic losses.
The government bailed out the banks, not the people. Goldman Sachs, JPMorgan, and other major financial players were handed hundreds of billions while homeowners and retirees were left to fend for themselves.
Public pensions were raided to cover state budget shortfalls, accelerating the push toward private retirement accounts that left workers even more vulnerable.
This is not speculation—it’s history repeating itself. The same forces that crashed the global economy in 2008 now want full control over Social Security and public pensions.
Once again, the profits will be privatized, and the risks will be socialized.
The Long-Term Plan: Replacing Public Benefits with Private Exploitation
The playbook extends beyond Social Security. Wall Street is leveraging the dismantling of public programs to force Americans into costly private alternatives:
Medicare & Medicaid Privatization – Private insurers are expanding Medicare Advantage plans, where profits come from denying care. Medicaid is being shifted to state-controlled block grants, opening the door for for-profit healthcare models.
Public Housing Sell-Offs – Blackstone, the world’s largest private landlord, is acquiring low-income housing as HUD funding is cut. The fewer public housing options available, the more people are forced into expensive rental markets controlled by Wall Street-backed firms.
Food Assistance Cuts Driving Exploitation – Cutting food aid forces low-income families to rely on predatory lenders and high-interest credit, feeding another sector of financial exploitation.
This isn’t just about dismantling public programs—it’s about creating a financial system where survival itself is pay-to-play. Once public benefits are gone, they will never be rebuilt. Retirement, healthcare, housing, and even food assistance will be handed over to corporations, ensuring that the most basic needs of life generate perpetual profits.
What to Watch For
Media narratives pushing later retirement as ‘necessary’ – Wall Street executives will continue conditioning the public to accept raising the Social Security age.
Pension “reforms” – Expect more pushes to transition public pensions to privately managed investment accounts, exposing retirement savings to financial speculation.
Expansion of private equity in public funds – State and municipal pension funds being funneled into high-fee, high-risk investments.
Continued consolidation of rental housing by Wall Street firms – As public housing disappears, Wall Street-backed companies like Blackstone will continue acquiring and controlling housing stock.
Expansion of Blackstone’s housing empire – More rental properties acquired, rent hikes, and evictions as Blackstone capitalizes on HUD cuts and the decline of public housing.
Lobbying for Social Security privatization – Expect Blackstone and other financial firms to push narratives about Social Security’s “insolvency” to manufacture a crisis and justify privatization.
Efforts to pit groups against each other – seniors vs. workers, veterans vs. low-income families—to obscure the fact that these cuts are hitting everyone.
This is the financial arm of the right-wing project—a long-term restructuring of the economy where safety nets no longer exist, and every necessity of life must be paid for at a premium. The real war isn’t just on public benefits—it’s on the right to a stable future.
The Political Agenda: Dismantling the New Deal & Great Society
For nearly a century, social safety nets have protected working Americans. But the far-right has long viewed programs like Social Security, Medicare, and Medicaid as obstacles to their vision of a fully privatized America.
Grover Norquist, a Republican policy architect, famously said:
"I don’t want to abolish government. I simply want to reduce it to the size where I can drag it into the bathroom and drown it in the bathtub."Paul Ryan pushed for Social Security and Medicare privatization, claiming federal benefits create “dependency.”
The Heritage Foundation, architects of Project 2025, have spent decades working to eliminate federal entitlement programs altogether.
This is not just a policy shift—it is the culmination of a long-term ideological war against government responsibility for the public good.
Historical Parallels: The Dangers of Manufactured Crisis and Privatization
This strategy of economic distress followed by privatization has been used before. Each time, it resulted in massive suffering, skyrocketing costs, and corporate enrichment.
The UK’s Austerity Disaster (2010-Present)
After the 2008 financial crash, the UK government imposed brutal spending cuts, claiming it was necessary for “fiscal responsibility.” The results?
The National Health Service (NHS) was underfunded, forcing millions to pay for private care.
Public housing budgets were slashed, fueling a homelessness crisis.
Food insecurity skyrocketed as welfare cuts left families unable to afford basic necessities.
Today, the UK’s cost of living crisis is a direct result of these policies—forcing the public to pay corporations for what was once a public right.
The gutting of Medicaid and HUD mirrors the UK’s austerity playbook—underfund essential services until they fail, then tell the public there’s no choice but to privatize. The NHS is now collapsing under this model, and the same fate awaits U.S. public health and housing programs.
Post-Soviet Russia: The Oligarch Takeover (1990s)
When the Soviet Union collapsed, public resources were privatized overnight, leading to:
A small elite of billionaires (oligarchs) taking control of state resources.
Public healthcare collapse, forcing Russians to rely on expensive private hospitals.
The elimination of pension security, leaving seniors destitute.
Wall Street’s push to privatize Social Security echoes post-Soviet Russia’s pension collapse—where public retirement security was erased overnight, forcing millions into financial precarity while oligarchs consolidated wealth. Just like in Russia, the goal here is to dismantle a public safety net, making retirement a privilege of the wealthy.
Greece’s Financial Collapse and Privatization (2010s)
During Greece’s debt crisis, international lenders forced the country to privatize public services. The results?
Public transportation and utilities were sold to corporate owners, causing skyrocketing costs.
Pension benefits were slashed, plunging retirees into extreme poverty.
Wages collapsed, leading to record unemployment and widespread despair.
Greece’s economic collapse wasn’t just debt—it was the intentional dismantling of social safety nets. Unemployment benefits were slashed, wages collapsed, and privatization funneled wealth upward. The same pattern is unfolding in the U.S. as UI cuts, work requirements, and Medicaid restrictions create a new, permanent underclass.
The lesson? Once public services are privatized, the cost of living explodes—and the working class suffers most.
This strategy didn’t just unfold abroad—it was weaponized in the U.S. as well. In the 1990s, policymakers funneled billions into private prisons, turning mass incarceration into a corporate cash machine. The 1996 welfare reform, under the guise of reducing 'dependency,' slashed public assistance, pushing millions into unstable, low-wage jobs.
Engineering the Collapse of Social Security
For decades, Social Security has provided a foundation of economic stability for over 70 million Americans, ensuring that seniors, disabled individuals, and surviving family members have a safety net when they need it most.
Project 2025 lays the groundwork for dismantling Social Security by calling for a shift away from guaranteed federal benefits toward private, market-based alternatives. The plan promotes raising the retirement age, cutting eligibility, and encouraging “personal savings accounts” managed by private financial firms—opening the door to Wall Street control over retirement security. While framed as modernization and fiscal responsibility, the end goal is clear: replace Social Security’s public safety net with a profit-driven system that benefits investment firms and leaves retirees exposed to market risk.
Leadership Takeover: Installing the Corporate Agenda
Earlier this year, Leland Dudek, a financial-tech executive with no experience in public benefits, was installed as Acting SSA Commissioner after his predecessor refused to comply with White House demands for expanded data-sharing that could expose Social Security recipients to corporate data harvesting.
Soon after, Frank Bisignano, a Project 2025 insider and former banking CEO, was tapped for permanent leadership—signaling a shift away from public stewardship and toward privatized benefits distribution. His background in financial automation suggests the end goal is to outsource Social Security administration to private corporations, reducing oversight and increasing the potential for exploitation.
This is not just a change in leadership—it is a fundamental shift in how these programs will be managed. By replacing experienced public-sector officials with corporate insiders, the administration is positioning Social Security, Medicare, and other programs for privatization, outsourcing, and reduced public oversight.
But a leadership takeover isn’t enough. To make the case for privatization, the system must be broken beyond repair—so the administration has moved swiftly to gut the workforce, limit access to benefits, and erode public trust.
Gutting the SSA Workforce: Breaking the System from Within
The Social Security Administration is already buckling under staffing shortages and outdated infrastructure. Nearly 300,000 Americans are currently waiting for decisions on their Social Security Disability claims, with average wait times approaching 220 days. For many, that means nearly eight months in financial limbo—unable to work, but without support. These delays are not anomalies—they are warnings.
And it’s about to get worse.
Under Project 2025, the administration plans to slash over 7,000 SSA jobs and close 47 field offices—many in rural and elderly-heavy communities. These cuts are not just budgetary decisions. They are strategic.
The impact will be devastating:
Application processing times will climb even higher, leaving seniors and disabled Americans waiting nearly a year—or more—for basic support.
Disability hearings will be delayed or canceled outright, leaving thousands without income or recourse.
Phone and online support systems will become unworkable, with fewer staff to handle growing caseloads and claimants spending hours on hold—if they can get through at all.
The system is already strained. The administration’s strategy is to break it further—then point to the dysfunction as proof that privatization is necessary.
Meanwhile, aggressive overpayment clawbacks to frame Social Security as wasteful—demanding vulnerable Americans repay thousands of dollars, even when SSA errors caused the mispayments. The goal is clear: manufacture public outrage and frustration to justify privatization.
This isn’t just a failure of government efficiency—it’s strategic sabotage. By slashing staff, closing field offices, and forcing claimants through endless red tape, the administration is ensuring that public trust in Social Security collapses. The worse the system functions, the easier it becomes to justify privatization. This manufactured dysfunction isn’t a flaw in the system—it’s the plan.
With fewer employees, fewer offices, and longer wait times, Americans are being pushed toward private retirement options, setting the stage for a corporate takeover of Social Security.
The Narrative Playbook in Action
“Social Security is going bankrupt—we have to fix it now.”
Reality: Social Security is fully funded through 2035, and minor tax adjustments could extend its solvency indefinitely.
“Raising the retirement age is necessary because people live longer.”
Reality: Life expectancy gains are not evenly distributed—working-class Americans, particularly in physically demanding jobs, are dying younger. Raising the retirement age disproportionately harms low-income workers while benefiting corporations that rely on extended labor force participation.
“There’s too much fraud in disability benefits.”
Reality: Actual fraud is extremely rare—most overpayments are due to administrative errors or delays, not deception. But the fraud narrative is weaponized to justify cuts and deny legitimate claims.
“Privatization will give Americans more control over their money.”
Reality: Privatization means Wall Street takes control, turning Social Security into another risky, profit-driven investment scheme.
“Public pensions are too expensive—we need to reform them.”
Reality: Reform is being used as a cover for shifting pensions toward private management, exposing workers’ retirement to Wall Street speculation while slashing future benefits.
“Pension funds should invest in private equity to maximize returns.”
Reality: Private equity firms extract huge fees from pension funds while assuming minimal risk—if investments fail, pensioners bear the loss while Wall Street collects fees either way.
“401(k)s and personal investments give workers more control.”
Reality: The push to replace pensions with 401(k)s benefits financial firms while forcing workers to manage their own retirement risks, subjecting them to market volatility and corporate mismanagement.
What to Watch For
SSA office closures and layoffs—making it harder for people to apply for benefits.
Tighter eligibility requirements for disability benefits—more denials, longer appeals processes, and people being forced to return to work despite medical conditions.
Aggressive ‘overpayment’ clawbacks—seniors and disabled people receiving surprise bills for thousands due to agency errors.
Narrative shifts in media—watch for think tanks and politicians pushing privatization as ‘reform’ while blaming ‘fraud’ and ‘overspending.’
Financial industry lobbying for Social Security “reform”—watch for think tanks, corporate-funded research, and politicians echoing BlackRock’s talking points about retirement age increases and private investment.
State pension fund restructuring – Watch for new policies forcing public pensions to rely on Wall Street investments.
Attacks on defined-benefit pensions – Expect efforts to replace guaranteed pensions with riskier 401(k)-style plans.
Corporate-backed pension “reforms” – These will be framed as necessary for sustainability but are designed to benefit private financial firms.
The Corporate Takeover of Healthcare
Healthcare privatization isn’t new, but Project 2025 accelerates it in a way that will leave millions without care. The Trump administration has set its sights on Medicare and Medicaid, stripping away federal protections and handing control over to private insurance companies—all while pretending to “save” these programs.
Meanwhile, the administration’s current proposed budget leaves $880 billion in unaccounted-for cuts, virtually guaranteeing that Medicare, Medicaid, and CHIP (Children’s Health Insurance Program) will be the targets. These programs are being positioned as the sacrificial lambs for corporate tax breaks and runaway defense spending. This isn’t belt-tightening—it’s a structural gutting of the nation’s healthcare safety net.
Adding to the warning signs, the Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) has offered $25,000 buyouts to all employees, a clear signal that a broader downsizing effort is underway. As the workforce tasked with administering federal healthcare programs is hollowed out, oversight will weaken—paving the way for privatization, benefit cuts, and exploitation.
Medicare Privatization: Handing Seniors Over to Private Insurers
Healthcare privatization isn’t new, but under Project 2025, it’s accelerating in ways that will leave millions without care. The Trump administration has set its sights on Medicare, stripping away federal protections and handing control over to private insurance companies—all while pretending to “save” the program.
Medicare Advantage (MA) is being used as a backdoor takeover. It’s now being positioned as the default enrollment option—forcing seniors into high-cost, restricted-network plans where corporate profits depend on denying care.
Drug price negotiations have been repealed, potentially paving the way to allow pharmaceutical companies to raise prices unchecked, pushing life-saving medications out of reach for millions.
Planned cuts to physician reimbursements are already prompting doctors to reconsider Medicare participation, threatening seniors’ access to care.
None of this is about improving care. It’s about funneling public dollars into the hands of private insurers and pharmaceutical companies—while eroding the most trusted public healthcare program in U.S. history.
The Narrative Playbook in Action
“Medicare Advantage expands choices for seniors.”
Reality: It’s a deliberate funneling of seniors into private, high-cost plans with fewer protections and more denied claims.“Seniors should be empowered to manage their own care.”
Reality: Privatized Medicare replaces guaranteed coverage with complex plans designed to confuse and limit access.“Cutting Medicare costs protects the program for future generations.”
Reality: The cuts protect corporate profits—while seniors are left with fewer options and higher out-of-pocket expenses.
What to Watch For
Medicare Advantage (MA) “default enrollments”—seniors automatically placed into private plans instead of traditional Medicare.
Drug price hikes—as price negotiation protections are repealed.
Physician drop-off—as more doctors stop accepting Medicare due to lowered reimbursements.
Narratives about “freedom of choice”—used to mask forced privatization.
Push to raise the Medicare eligibility age—under the guise of “sustainability.”
Medicaid Block Grants & CHIP Cuts: Gutting Healthcare for the Poor, Disabled, and Children
While Medicare privatization targets seniors, Medicaid and CHIP are being dismantled through a different route—by slashing funding, converting it into state-controlled block grants, and handing governors sweeping authority to impose work requirements, cut eligibility, and divert funds to private insurance providers. These changes will push millions off coverage, force the most vulnerable into for-profit systems, and leave many completely uninsured.
Project 2025 explicitly calls for transforming Medicaid into a “consumer-directed” model, stripping it of federal protections and shifting authority to states under the pretense of “flexibility.” Under this plan, federal funding would be converted into capped block grants, meaning states would receive a fixed amount of money regardless of need or enrollment levels. This would sever the guarantee that Medicaid covers everyone who qualifies and allow states to ration care as they see fit. The blueprint also encourages states to impose work requirements, charge premiums, and divert care to private insurers.
Most alarmingly, it proposes imposing lifetime limits on Medicaid coverage—meaning individuals could be permanently cut off from care once they reach a cap, regardless of future medical needs. These changes would transform Medicaid from a public safety net into a fragmented, profit-driven system that leaves millions behind.
This shift will:
Limit eligibility, pushing millions off coverage.
End federal oversight, enabling states to impose lifetime caps and work requirements.
Slash home care services, forcing seniors and disabled individuals into nursing homes—or leaving them without care altogether.
Gut the Children’s Health Insurance Program (CHIP), jeopardizing healthcare access for millions of low-income children as state budgets are redirected toward private plans or used to fill unrelated deficits.
These changes won’t happen everywhere at once—but red-state governors will move first, creating early warning signs of broader restructuring:
Texas, Florida, Tennessee, Georgia, Mississippi – All have previously attempted or implemented Medicaid work requirements or coverage restrictions.
Iowa, Missouri, South Carolina – Likely to follow with stricter eligibility limits and benefit cuts.
Ohio and Wisconsin – Though traditionally swing states, their Republican-led legislatures are actively exploring Medicaid privatization frameworks.
This is the same austerity playbook used in the past:
When Reagan slashed Medicaid and defunded mental health facilities in the 1980s, homelessness surged—pushing thousands with untreated mental illness onto the streets or into jails. Even Republican leaders now acknowledge the damage. At a 2024 town hall, then-VP nominee JD Vance called Reagan’s decision a “mistake,” linking it directly to rising homelessness and incarceration. “We let people live on the streets instead of getting inpatient care,” Vance said, adding that “taxpayers have had to pick up the burden ever since.”
When Clinton imposed “work requirements” on welfare in 1996, millions fell into poverty while corporate job placement programs profited. Despite being widely framed—even by many liberals—as a successful reform, the policy simply reduced caseloads, not poverty. It slashed direct aid, eroded the safety net, and left families with fewer protections during economic downturns, forcing many into unstable, low-wage jobs without long-term support.
Now it’s being used to gut healthcare—pushing low-income Americans into for-profit alternatives while dismantling the last federal protections for the poor, elderly, disabled, and children.
And the clearest warning sign: The current proposed federal budget still leaves $880 billion in cuts unaccounted for, which will almost certainly be drawn from Medicare, Medicaid, or CHIP.
The Narrative Playbook in Action
“Medicaid block grants give states more flexibility.”
Reality: States will use that flexibility to cut coverage, impose harsher restrictions, and divert funds into private insurance contracts.“Work requirements help lift people out of poverty.”
Reality: Work requirements are designed to kick people off the rolls—not help them access care or employment.“Medicaid fraud is out of control.”
Reality: Fraud rates are extremely low, but the narrative is being weaponized to justify widespread disenrollment.“States know how to serve their communities better than Washington.”
Reality: That’s a pretext for stripping federal standards and replacing healthcare with corporate profit models.“CHIP funding is safe.”
Reality: CHIP funding will be quietly reduced, frozen, or subjected to tighter eligibility—targeting the children least able to defend themselves. In fact, children are already losing coverage at alarming rates: over 4 million lost Medicaid or CHIP in the past year alone, many due to administrative errors and red tape—not changes in eligibility. These losses are happening even before the deep cuts proposed take effect.
What to Watch For
State-level Medicaid work requirements and lifetime caps—Texas, Florida, and Georgia are likely to lead.
Hospitals reducing Medicaid patient intake—as reimbursements fall.
Expansion of state Medicaid “pilot programs”—used to normalize benefit restrictions.
CHIP funding cuts and eligibility tightening—reducing access for low-income children.
Narratives about Medicaid fraud and fiscal responsibility—used to obscure the real agenda.
The IRS Workforce Cuts and Federal Downsizing
The Social Security Administration isn’t the only agency being gutted. The Internal Revenue Service (IRS) is also being hollowed out—part of a broader strategy to erode the government’s ability to function and then blame it for failing.
Project 2025 explicitly targets the IRS for dismantling, portraying tax enforcement as government overreach and mass downsizing as a path to “freedom.” The blueprint calls for slashing staff, weakening the agency’s ability to audit the wealthy, and rolling back modernization efforts. Framed as an attack on the “administrative state,” this is a strategy to cripple revenue collection, shield billionaires from accountability, and manufacture a funding crisis to justify deeper cuts to public programs. It’s not reform—it’s a deliberate effort to break the IRS from within and normalize corporate tax evasion.
As of early 2025, the IRS has already laid off 6,700 employees, with internal documents and reporting suggesting that as much as half of its 80,000-person workforce could ultimately be eliminated. These cuts include the staff who process returns, assist taxpayers, and enforce tax laws—leaving an already strained system on the brink.
The consequences will be immediate and deeply felt:
Refunds will be delayed for millions of Americans.
Tax enforcement on billionaires and corporations will collapse.
Customer support will deteriorate even further.
Public frustration will rise—and that frustration will be weaponized to justify more privatization and deregulation.
How IRS Cuts Fit into the Dismantling of Safety Nets
Starving Social Programs of Funding
The IRS collects the revenue that funds Social Security, Medicare, and other safety net programs.
By weakening tax enforcement, billionaires and corporations can evade taxes, reducing federal revenue and manufacturing a budget crisis to justify cuts to social programs.
Expanding Deficits as a Pretext for Safety Net Cuts
2024 tax cuts for the ultra-wealthy and corporations drained $2 trillion from federal revenue.
Now, the administration is citing rising deficits as a reason to gut Social Security, Medicare, and Medicaid, claiming they are “financially unsustainable.”
Making Government Look Dysfunctional
IRS layoffs are reducing staff capacity during peak tax season, raising concerns about longer processing times and reduced taxpayer support.
Just like SSA cuts, these delays will be weaponized as evidence that government-run programs are ineffective—laying the groundwork for privatization.
Shifting Tax Burdens to the Working Class
IRS budget cuts mean fewer audits for billionaires and corporations but more audits for low-income taxpayers.
Funding for tax credits like the Child Tax Credit (CTC) is at risk of being reduced, making it harder for struggling families to claim benefits.
Gutting the IRS is part of the broader strategy to dismantle safety nets. By allowing billionaires to hoard wealth tax-free, the administration is engineering a fiscal crisis that will be used to justify privatizing Social Security, Medicare, and other public benefits—all while shifting tax burdens onto working-class Americans.
The Narrative Playbook in Action
“We can’t afford Social Security and Medicare.”
Reality: The deficit crisis is manufactured by tax cuts for billionaires and corporations while safety nets are deliberately underfunded.
“Tax cuts stimulate the economy.”
Reality: They only benefit the wealthy, while workers get higher costs, fewer benefits, and less public support.
“Government inefficiency proves we need privatization.”
Reality: The government is being sabotaged from within by gutting funding and staff, then pointing to the resulting dysfunction as justification for privatization.
What to Watch For
More IRS job cuts – Further delays in tax refunds and weakened enforcement on billionaire tax cheats.
Proposals to cut Social Security and Medicare – Framed as “necessary” because of the deficit crisis caused by tax breaks for the rich.
More media narratives claiming “we can’t afford safety nets” – Austerity messaging will ramp up as a cover for more cuts.
Further IRS job reductions – Slashed enforcement staff means billionaires and corporations will continue evading taxes, fueling the manufactured deficit crisis.
Veterans Betrayed
While the administration publicly claims to support veterans, behind closed doors, it is slashing VA jobs, cutting services, and accelerating the push toward privatization—turning the VA into a for-profit enterprise that benefits corporate healthcare networks, not those who served.
Project 2025 calls for shifting veterans’ healthcare away from the VA and into private-sector networks, framing it as “choice” and “efficiency.” The plan promotes consolidating or closing VA facilities and replacing them with voucher-style systems that funnel public funds to corporate providers. The goal is to reduce federal responsibility and move veterans into profit-driven care models—undermining the VA’s integrated, veteran-specific services.
The Evidence: A Systematic Effort to Weaken the VA
Pete Hegseth, a longtime advocate for VA privatization, now leads the Pentagon as Secretary of Defense. He has repeatedly pushed for veterans to rely on private healthcare instead of strengthening the VA, making his appointment a direct signal of intent to dismantle the system. His past affiliations with pro-privatization groups, including Concerned Veterans for America (CVA)—a Koch-backed organization—highlight his long-standing efforts to erode public healthcare options for veterans.
J.D. Vance has publicly stated that he would consider privatizing parts of the VA. Now, as Vice President, he has direct influence over veterans' policy, and his alignment with conservative lawmakers pushing for privatization suggests that these efforts will accelerate. His rhetoric about the inefficiency of government-run healthcare echoes corporate lobbying efforts to redirect VA funding into private insurance and hospital networks.
Doug Collins, the newly confirmed VA Secretary, has deep ties to lawmakers who have long sought to privatize veterans’ healthcare. While he was framed as a "moderate" alternative to more extreme choices like Hegseth, his record in Congress suggests he will continue the administration’s push toward outsourcing VA services. His appointment is widely seen as an effort to make privatization appear more palatable.
Job Cuts, Downsizing, & Sabotage
The Department of Veterans Affairs is eliminating 80,000 jobs to begin as early as June, drastically reducing its ability to process disability claims, staff hospitals, and provide medical care. A significant portion of those workers being laid off—both within the VA and across other federal agencies—are veterans themselves. These cuts will leave veterans with fewer resources and longer wait times, pushing more into privatized, for-profit healthcare systems. The administration claims the cuts are part of a “cost-saving” measure, but they align with the long-term strategy of reducing the VA’s capabilities to justify further privatization.
Republican lawmakers have introduced bills that expand private healthcare options for veterans while stripping resources from VA hospitals. While framed as "choice," these policies systematically defund the VA, making privatization inevitable. Proponents argue that private-sector providers can fill the gaps, but decades of research show that veterans receive better, more specialized care within the VA system than in private hospitals.
A leaked internal VA memo outlines a long-term plan to shift services away from VA hospitals and clinics and toward private providers, aligning with the administration’s broader push for healthcare privatization. The memo also details efforts to limit oversight on private contracts, making it easier for for-profit companies to extract money from the VA while reducing accountability.
The Supreme Court recently ruled against applying the long-standing “benefit-of-the-doubt” standard in veterans’ disability claims. This decision makes it harder for veterans to qualify for benefits, further reducing reliance on the VA and increasing dependence on private insurers. Legal experts warn that this ruling will disproportionately harm veterans with service-related conditions that are difficult to prove through documentation alone.
The Bigger Picture: Engineering a Manufactured Collapse
The administration is not just weakening the VA—it is engineering a crisis to make privatization seem like the only solution. By defunding and overloading the system, they are ensuring failure, which will then be used to justify further cuts and outsourcing.
This is the same playbook used to privatize public education, the prison system, and portions of Medicare:
Understaff services to create dysfunction.
Generate long wait times and delays in care.
Redirect funding to private alternatives under the guise of "reform."
Claim the system is failing and push privatization as the only solution.
Veterans’ healthcare is becoming the next frontier of corporate exploitation. This isn’t just about defunding the VA—it’s about dismantling it entirely and replacing it with a for-profit system that will exploit veterans rather than serve them.
Once the VA’s public healthcare system is gutted, bringing it back will be nearly impossible. Veterans fought for this country, and now they are being sold out to corporate interests.
The Narrative Playbook in Action
“Private healthcare will give veterans more choices.”
Reality: VA hospitals are being deliberately underfunded to drive patients to corporate-run alternatives with higher costs and fewer protections.
“VA disability benefits need to be reformed to prevent fraud.”
Reality: Veterans with PTSD, tinnitus, and other conditions are being denied benefits they earned. The fraud rate in VA disability claims is minuscule, but the "fraud" narrative is being used to justify restricting access
“Reducing VA overhead makes care more efficient.”
Reality: It’s a cover for mass layoffs and hospital closures that leave veterans without care, forcing them into for-profit systems.
What to Watch For
VA job cuts and hospital closures – Expect the first wave of closures in red states where private healthcare lobbying is strongest.
More veterans pushed into private insurance – Out-of-pocket costs will rise, and coverage gaps will increase.
Disability benefit eligibility reviews – Veterans will be reclassified to disqualify thousands from benefits.
Expansion of VA outsourcing – Private hospitals and insurance companies will receive increasing federal contracts to absorb VA patients.
Veterans’ groups mobilizing against cuts – If organizations like the DAV, VFW, and The American Legion escalate their resistance, it will be a sign that privatization efforts are accelerating.
SNAP Cuts & Restrictions: Engineering Food Insecurity
Project 2025 calls for dismantling federal food assistance programs like SNAP by consolidating them into state-run systems with fewer protections. The plan promotes stricter work requirements, time limits, and replacing direct aid with “food boxes” or vouchers—models that reduce access and fail to meet nutritional needs. By stripping federal oversight, states could scale back benefits or redirect funds, pushing more families into hunger while funneling resources to corporate food suppliers and charity-based alternatives. As with other safety nets, the goal is to weaken public infrastructure and shift responsibility to the private sector.
Back in January, House Republicans proposed slashing $22 billion from SNAP over the next decade, tightening eligibility requirements, and imposing stricter work mandates. Outlined in a document under a section titled, “Ending Cradle-to-Grave Dependence,” these cuts would strip food assistance from millions of low-income families, children, and seniors, forcing many into deeper financial instability.
In addition to reducing benefits, the administration is pushing for new food restrictions, including banning sugar-sweetened beverages and certain processed foods. While framed as a public health initiative, these restrictions function as another layer of bureaucratic control over low-income Americans—targeting recipients rather than addressing corporate food monopolies that drive unhealthy diets.
Currently, SNAP provides an average of $187 per person per month—just $6.16 per day. With inflation driving grocery prices higher, the proposed changes will further squeeze struggling households, exacerbating food insecurity nationwide.
The Narrative Playbook in Action
"Work requirements ensure only the truly needy get benefits."
Reality: These policies are designed to strip benefits from millions, disproportionately harming the working poor, disabled individuals, and families with unstable employment."SNAP fraud is a major problem."
Reality: Fraud rates are under 2% and most occur at the retailer level, not from recipients, yet this talking point is used to justify cuts and increased surveillance of recipients."Food aid should be managed at the state level."
Reality: This weakens federal oversight, allowing states to impose harsher restrictions and make cuts with little accountability."Banning soda purchases helps public health."
Reality: While framed as a health initiative, this is a smokescreen for broader SNAP cuts, targeting low-income recipients while ignoring corporate food monopolies that drive unhealthy diets."The U.S. spends too much on food aid."
Reality: SNAP benefits account for just 1.7% of the federal budget, yet are being targeted while corporate subsidies remain untouched.
What to Watch For
Stricter work requirements – Targeting adults without dependents, despite evidence that work mandates disproportionately harm workers with unstable employment.
State-level refusals of federal food assistance funds – Forcing local charities to make up the difference.
The repeal of Thrifty Food Plan expansion – Reducing monthly benefits even further.
Expanded SNAP purchase bans – Potential future restrictions beyond sugar-sweetened beverages.
Attempts to block emergency food assistance programs – Weakening the social safety net for crises and economic downturns.
Housing Assistance Cuts & Privatization: The Push Toward Corporate Landlords
Project 2025 targets housing assistance programs by calling for a rollback of federal involvement in affordable housing and a shift toward private-sector solutions. The blueprint frames public housing as inefficient and encourages reducing HUD’s footprint by eliminating direct rental assistance, limiting funding for housing programs, and relying instead on faith-based and market-driven initiatives. These proposals would gut Section 8 vouchers, accelerate the sell-off of public housing, and redirect resources to private developers—undermining housing as a public good and turning shelter into another profit stream for corporate landlords.
HUD is being redirected toward private development, cutting public housing funds and scaling back Section 8 vouchers. The administration’s goal is to phase out direct government involvement in housing assistance, shifting public funds toward corporate-run housing solutions that prioritize investor profits over affordability.
The appointment of Scott Turner as HUD Secretary underscores this shift. Turner, a former Texas legislator and real estate investor, has a long record of opposing government intervention in housing. His appointment signals a move away from public housing programs and toward policies that favor corporate landlords and reduce tenant protections.
As a Texas state legislator, Turner voted against expanding affordable rental housing and supported legislation allowing landlords to reject tenants solely because they receive federal housing assistance.
He opposed funding for public-private partnerships that support the homeless and voted against bills designed to study homelessness among youth and veterans.
He has described government assistance programs as "dangerous" and "harmful", comparing welfare to a form of bondage worse than slavery.
Given Turner’s record, his leadership at HUD is expected to drive policies that reduce government support for low-income housing while favoring private real estate developers and corporate landlords.
The Los Angeles Housing Authority has already stopped accepting new Section 8 applicants due to federal funding uncertainty, leaving thousands of low-income families without access to critical housing aid. Nationwide, $60 million in halted HUD funding has stalled hundreds of affordable housing projects, exacerbating the housing crisis.
Meanwhile, Wall Street-backed firms like Blackstone are acquiring more rental properties, ensuring that those displaced by HUD cuts will face a private market dominated by corporate landlords—where rent hikes and evictions are standard practice.
Turner has also pushed faith-based and private-sector solutions to homelessness, signaling that HUD funding may shift away from evidence-based "housing-first" models toward charity-based approaches that do not guarantee stable housing.
HUD is reportedly exploring "crypto and blockchain-based housing assistance programs," a move that could introduce financial instability into housing benefits while prioritizing speculative investment.
The Narrative Playbook in Action
"Government assistance creates dependency."
Reality: This narrative ignores the systemic factors driving poverty and housing instability. Cutting assistance does not promote independence—it forces families into financial desperation and worsens homelessness.
"Privatization leads to more efficient housing solutions."
Reality: Privatization prioritizes profit over people, resulting in fewer affordable housing options and higher costs for low-income renters.
"Faith-based programs will replace government housing assistance."
Reality: Faith-based models do not guarantee housing stability and often impose moral or religious conditions on recipients, making them an unreliable substitute for public assistance.
"Public housing should be left to the private sector."
Reality: This is about selling off public housing assets to developers, worsening the affordability crisis while enriching real estate investors.
"HUD spending is out of control."
Reality: The crisis isn’t overspending—it’s deliberate underfunding, leaving millions vulnerable while funneling public dollars into private hands.
"Renters should take more personal responsibility."
Reality: Corporate landlords are driving up rents at rates that far outpace wage growth, forcing more Americans into housing insecurity.
"The market will provide more housing solutions if we cut regulations."
Reality: Deregulation only benefits developers—it leads to unaffordable luxury units, not affordable housing. It can even lead to dangerous living conditions, as safety and labor standards are weakened in the name of “efficiency.
What to Watch For
Further Section 8 restrictions – Including time limits, work requirements, and forced reductions in assistance.
HUD field office closures – Making it harder for low-income tenants to access housing resources.
State and local agencies cutting back rental assistance – Due to decreased federal funding.
Private equity firms acquiring more housing stock – Particularly in cities where public housing projects are being sold off.
Expansion of Blackstone’s housing empire – As HUD funding declines, Blackstone and other Wall Street-backed firms are acquiring more rental properties, driving up rent prices and increasing evictions.
Crypto and blockchain experiments in housing – HUD is reportedly exploring blockchain-based grant distribution, which could introduce financial instability into housing assistance.
Stealth Dismantling in Action
The SSA recently attempted to quietly eliminate the Enumeration at Birth program, which allows hospitals to register newborns for Social Security numbers. This essential service ensures seamless access to benefits, tax credits, and future government programs.
The abrupt rollback faced immediate backlash from hospitals, medical organizations, and lawmakers, forcing the SSA to reverse course. However, this was not an isolated incident—it fits a broader pattern of policy reversals following public pressure, signaling a trial-and-error dismantling strategy.
A similar case unfolded at the Department of Veterans Affairs (VA), where the administration attempted to cancel 875 contracts, including those funding cancer care, toxic exposure assessments, and disability evaluations for veterans. The move was justified as a cost-saving measure, but after intense backlash from lawmakers and veterans' groups, the VA halted the cancellations and announced a review.
This strategy follows a clear pattern:
Quietly break the system – Implement policy changes that restrict access to benefits.
Gauge public response – If there is minimal resistance, continue dismantling the program.
If caught, retreat—but not abandon the effort – Reframe, delay, or shift the policy elsewhere under the guise of "efficiency" or "cost-cutting."
Expect more stealth rollbacks in benefit administration, where essential services are chipped away in ways designed to appear minor or administrative, making it harder for the public to track the full scope of the attack on social safety nets.
Final Takeaway
This isn’t about budget cuts—it’s about eliminating public safety nets and shifting control to corporations. Once they’re gone, they won’t come back without massive, sustained resistance.
Privatized Social Security will not be easily restored.
Corporate-controlled Medicare, Medicaid, and VA services will make healthcare unaffordable.
Food and housing aid will disappear, forcing millions into financial precarity.
While Project 2025 accelerates this agenda, it’s part of a decades-long effort to dismantle public services. This is not about one administration—it’s a structural shift that will persist unless actively reversed.
This is the endgame: a manufactured collapse designed to break public trust, dismantle safety nets, and permanently privatize survival.
The social safety net wasn’t a gift—it was a recognition that a just society ensures basic stability for its people. The moment government abandons that role, it ceases to serve the public—it serves profit.
Once corporations control the basic necessities of life, the working class will have no leverage. Housing, healthcare, retirement, and even food assistance will become pay-to-play systems, where access depends on wealth, corporate allegiance, or government compliance.
Safety nets will become profit traps—designed to extract, not protect.
This is not a policy debate—it’s a war on the right to a stable future. Once these systems are dismantled, rebuilding them would take extraordinary public pressure—waiting until the damage is done means accepting a world where survival itself comes with a price tag.
Awareness is the first step. The next is refusing to let privatization be framed as ‘reform.’ Those engineering this collapse are counting on complacency. The time to push back is now.
If this felt like a lot—it is. That’s because it’s all connected. I’ll be breaking this down in smaller pieces soon for quick reference. But the full picture matters, and this is it.
A full strategy and action playbook has been released: The Playbook for Resisting a Safety Net Collapse. Because if we understand their playbook, we can disrupt it. But only if we have our own.
And one thing that must be in ours: solidarity. If we let them convince us that some cuts matter more than others, they’ve already won. Every attack is a test of what we’ll ignore—and the only winning response is to refuse to ignore any of it.
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Further Reading
Analyses - In-depth breakdowns examining the systems driving democratic collapse—exposing threats, tactics, and timelines to empower informed resistance.
Playbooks - Actionable strategic guides that directly respond to each analysis, providing step-by-step resistance plans designed for immediate implementation.
Insights - Timely, targeted pieces highlighting critical events, emerging threats, and essential context—keeping you ahead of developments as they unfold.
The Playbook for Resisting a Safety Net Collapse
This Playbook is a strategic response guide, building on the foundation laid out in SSA, VA, Medicare, Medicaid, SNAP, and HUD Are Under Attack—Here’s Their Plan. If you’re looking for a deeper analysis of how we got here, start there. This Playbook focuses on what can be done now.
The Playbook For Resisting a Safety Net Collapse is now out: https://criticalresistance.substack.com/p/the-playbook-for-resisting-a-safety
This is such a great outline of everything that’s happening. Many people are overwhelmed by the quantity of changes and don’t know what to look out for.