🪦🔥 TrumpGPT’s Plan to Dismantle the Tomb of the Faceless Bureaucrat
And End the Eternal Bonfire of Waste Lit by Every Modern President
Well, they’ve finally done it.
Congress has approved funding for a long-overdue national monument: The Tomb of the Faceless Bureaucrat.
A solemn tribute to every unnamed paper-pusher who’s ever delayed a permit, buried a regulation, or spent nine months and $7 million writing a 53-page DEI strategy for sand dune beetles in Nevada, or just made your life miserable.
This isn’t just a memorial. It’s an eternal inferno.
🔹📘 If you think this sounds like political satire… you’re half right. But Martin Armstrong has been predicting this kind of constitutional train wreck for decades.
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By law, the bonfire must remain lit in perpetuity — fed daily by freshly minted pallets of Benjamins, shrink-wrapped at the Fed and helicoptered in with full Treasury Department honors.
And of course, the Tomb must be guarded 24/7 by IRS agents — each carrying a clipboard, a W-9 form, and the quiet satisfaction of knowing they’re above accountability.
The president’s role? Light the match. Pour the gasoline on the fire. Smile for the cameras.
Under current law, that’s his only choice.
But TrumpGPT has other plans, big plans.
THE LEGAL REALITY
The monument may be fictional. But the fire is real — and it’s burning $6 trillion a year. That fire is fueled by the Impoundment Control Act of 1974, a little-known law passed in the shadow of Watergate that strips the president of all discretion over federal spending.
Here’s how the system works now:
1. The president submits a budget to Congress.
2. Congress declares it dead on arrival (DOA) and ignores it completely.
3. Congress passes a budget or continuing resolution that funds thousands of pork-barrel programs and pet projects — often totally at odds with the president’s own policy agenda.
4. The president is legally bound to spend every penny — no matter how wasteful, redundant, or destructive.
5. If he doesn’t? He gets impeached.
The ICA was the legal justification for Trump’s first impeachment, after he delayed funding to Ukraine. Not canceled. Not diverted. Just delayed.
The message was clear: Presidents are not allowed to say no.
NO LINE-ITEM VETO. NO BLOCKING SPENDING. NO POWER.
Imagine if Congress decided to:
- Fund the National Museum of Paperclip Design
- Launch a NASA mission to measure the carbon footprint of moon dust
- And pay for weekly drag queen story hours at every military base in the country
Under current law, the president has two options:
- Sign it
- Or shut down the government entirely
There’s no middle ground, no line-item veto, no option to simply not spend money on the dumbest ideas in modern history.
TRUMPGPT’s Next Huge Move
TrumpGPT isn’t a catchphrase. It’s a doctrine — an AI-guided war plan to reshape the balance of power between the executive branch and the bureaucratic state using the one weapon no one expects: lawfare.
And its first target is the ICA.
The goal? Restore the president’s constitutional right to impound funds — the ability to refuse to spend money on programs that undermine national interest, waste taxpayer dollars, or violate the administration’s policy vision.
Once the president regains the power to say “no”, we can finish building what TrumpGPT created:
DOGE — the Department of Government Efficiency — created earlier this year as a temporary task force to audit federal waste. Figures: the only temporary government agency ever created and its purpose is to control wasteful government spending…. But after the ICA is struck down, DOGE will be made permanent — and Elon Musk will finally get the credit he deserves for jumpstarting this agency. Only TrumpGPT would think to combine fiscal discipline with meme magic.
DOGE will continually review all spending and return wasteful allocations to the Treasury. No more blank checks. No more automatic disbursements to NGOs, foreign governments, or alphabet soup agencies pushing ideology instead of results. So fear not, federally funded Drag Queen hours are coming to an abrupt end.
SCOTUS 2025–2026: THE FIVE-CASE DOCTRINAL KILL ZONE
Here’s how TrumpGPT plans to use the 2025–2026 Supreme Court term to reshape presidential power — and dismantle the Tomb of the Faceless Bureaucrat:
1. The Impoundment Control Act (ICA)
Target: Presidential spending discretion
Goal: Repeal or gut the ICA and restore the executive’s right to impound funds.
Why it matters: It would break Congress’s monopoly on spending and bring back checks and balances in budgeting.
2. The Independent Agency Doctrine
Target: Agencies like the CFPB, FTC, and SEC
Goal: Affirm the president’s full authority to remove any executive official.
Why it matters: Undermines the “fourth branch” of government and re-centralizes authority in the White House.
3. Schedule F Revival
Target: Career bureaucrats who undermine elected leadership
Goal: Reinstate Schedule F and allow presidents to fire disloyal or obstructionist federal employees.
Why it matters: This is how you “drain the swamp” without needing to win Congress.
4. The Chevron Doctrine (Already Dead?)
Target: Judicial deference to administrative agencies
Goal: Bury Chevron once and for all; force agencies to prove every action with clear statutory authority.
Why it matters: Prevents bureaucrats from rewriting laws under the guise of “interpretation.”
5. The Administrative Procedure Act (APA)
Target: Delays and obstructions to executive action
Goal: Reinterpret APA standards to allow rapid and reversible regulatory action from the White House.
Why it matters: Stops activist judges from blocking presidential policy with procedural roadblocks.
THE TOMB WON’T GO QUIETLY
Make no mistake — they will fight this.
The Tomb of the Faceless Bureaucrat is the centerpiece of the modern Deep State. It feeds itself on automatic appropriations, rules no one voted for, and programs no one understands.
It is guarded not just by IRS agents with clipboards, but by think tanks, lobbyists, and law professors who believe the presidency should exist only to carry out Congress’s will.
But TrumpGPT — and the movement behind it — believes something else:
That the president is not Congress’s butler. That the executive branch must govern, not just implement. And that we are past the point of politely asking permission to say no.
This Supreme Court term — 2025–2026 — is the showdown.
The match is lit.
Let’s burn the tomb to the ground.
📕 The bonfire may be burning, but the match was lit years ago.
The World According to Martin Armstrong lays out the roadmap they don’t want you to see — from market cycles to political implosions.
Read it now, or wish you had.