Elon Musk has become a role model in micromanagement after he sends a bizarre email to all US government staff, demanding to know what they have been up to in the last week
Elon Musk is no stranger to making outlandish decisions. This time, he’s sent an incredibly peculiar email to all US government staff in what looks to be a masterclass in micromanagement.
On X, the CEO of Tesla and head of the Department of Government Efficiency posted: “Consistent with President [Donald Trump]’s instructions, all federal employees will shortly receive an email requesting to understand what they got done last week. Failure to respond will be taken as a resignation.”
You may be thinking this is satire. Perhaps an event out of an outlandish political drama. But, no. It is indeed very real. As real as the Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE.)
The reaction to his post on X has been eventful. While some praise his initiative, others think it is just plain funny, and have responded with memes and jokes.
One user wrote: “Hi, Elon. I’m the Federal Employee responsible for unlocking bathrooms at the Grenada War Memorial. I unlocked 3 bathrooms last week. Please don’t fire me.”
Another posted: “What if [the email] goes to spam?”
A third wrote: “Guess I’ll be submitting ‘survived another week without accidentally emailing the whole agency my lunch order’ as my accomplishment. Holding my breath for the ‘Employee of the Week’ award!”
Elon Musk is no stranger to weirdness, and often focusing on the unimportant aspects of the world. Once, the head of DOGE was getting excited about a 295ft “monolith” photographed on Mars.
The “square structure” photographed by the photographed by the Mars Global Surveyor (MGS) Mars Orbiter Camera (MOC) received reasonable attention on Reddit ’s ‘aliens’ subreddit and then gained a lot more traction after Rogan and Musk posted about it on X.
At the time, Musk said we should “send astronauts to investigate”. However, while people have speculated wildly that nature creates no such structures, what they are more likely to be are some interesting rocks.
These particular monoliths are not new, either. The Mars monolith was captured in 2008 and the monolith on Phobos, one of two moons that orbit Mars, was captured in 1998.
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By staronline@reachplc.com (Zesha Saleem)
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