DOGE: Synthesis of the American Putsch

American governance has entered a new phase; no longer is it a matter of who holds office, but of how control is exercised.

The pillars of democracy—checks and balances, and legitimacy derived from elections—have been eroded. While elections do occur, increasingly, real power no longer rests with elected officials. What remains is a struggle over how that power is exercised.

The first is the Deep State: a managerial class too inert to inspire fear, yet too entrenched to dislodge. The second is the Coup Scare: the growing belief that only through force and loyalty from one’s base, not law or merit, can one reclaim the State for the people.

And now there is DOGE, the Department of Government Efficiency, established by Donald Trump in 2025, run by Elon Musk; it weaponises the former through using the logic of the latter in a Hegelian synthesis with teeth.

The Deep State as Cold Coup

James Burnham saw it early on: managerial elites would replace both capitalists and elected officials. Bureaucrats, not legislators, would dictate outcomes. Loyalty to voter and shareholder would shift to egos with diplomas and redundant committees.

Hayek and Mises foresaw the consequence: a bureaucracy not merely inefficient, but outright harmful to good governance and business. It would rule by stillness, making permanence its only characteristic.

This is not tyranny. It is something worse: this is the gentle stability of managed decline, while a thousand institutions get created, of which none are accountable. While presidents enter and leave office, these agencies persist like a priesthood.

This is the Cold Coup: a regime with no head nor rear to attack.

January 6th as a Hot Putsch

Then came the reaction. Carl Schmitt had warned that when institutions fail to uphold order in chaos, someone else will. January 6 was not a coup but a failed test.

It taught the populist right a lesson which the polite centre is resistant to: power does not flow from persuasion, but from control. The administrative state is not neutral: it’s the enemy.

The new goal then became not to reform the state, but to take control over it. Replace civil servants with loyalists. Fire the regulators. Purge the generals. In short: occupy the institutions, then rewrite the rules.

This is the logic of the Hot Putsch: when ballots are too slow and bureaucracy too entrenched, the only path forward is seizure by force. 

The Revolt Against Institutional Reality

But neither coup, cold or hot, could proceed without the erosion of something deeper: belief in the system.

Indeed, Ivy League universities still award prestige. The State Department still publishes its reports. Legacy media still print their papers and broadcast their programs. But no one outside the coastal elites of New York and Los Angeles believes them. Their prestige is not contingent on their performance. Their credibility is inherited, not earned. Their edicts thus fall flat.

Into this vacuum entered the use of irony and satire in social media as memetic warfare. Not as an ideology by itself, but as a tool for disruption. Its purpose was not to build, but to make what is collapse. Memes function as cultural artillery: low-effort, high-impact symbols aimed at de-legitimating institutions.

The meme war had cleared the ground. It turned the Cold Coup (i.e. the Deep State) from something sacred into a target for satire . As a result, it made the notion of the Hot Putsch enter the realm of the possible.

DOGE as Hegelian Synthesis

On 20 January 2025, Trump did not dismantle the bureaucracy. He commandeered it.

By Executive Order 14158, the meme-sounding Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE) was born, with Elon Musk placed at the helm. In a bid to reduce waste of taxpayer’s money, thousands of federal employees were dismissed, programs put an end to, and whole departments marked for closure. 

DOGE wants to seize the buildings and move in. This is not reform. It is institutional conquest. It does not seek legitimacy through consensus or law.

It repurposes the bureaucratic machine not to stabilise it, but to purge it. It fuses the permanence gained by a Cold Coup with the Hot Putsch’s speed and decisiveness. 

DOGE is then the weaponisation of the coup through managerial infrastructure. Its enemies call it authoritarian. Its supporters call it efficient. Both happen to be correct.

The Meme Is Mightier Than the Ballot

DOGE did not emerge from a manifesto, but from exhaustion of institutions that could not act, of elections that no longer were convincing, of bureaucracies that survived every administration but solved nothing. What began as a joke is now Trump's instrument.

DOGE does not ask who should rule, only what must be done, and how fast.

This, then, is not the end of democracy, but what follows when democracy stops working and refuses to admit it. It is a response to what has been left unsolved for too long; and those behind the wheel refuse to go through tedious procedures to correct their predecessors’ mistakes.

Statement

In 2025, Donald Trump didn’t drain the swamp: he redirected its flow. The new Department of Government Efficiency, run by Elon Musk, merges the permanence of bureaucracy with the zeal of insurgency. This is no longer governance by law or vote, but by seizure. The Cold Coup of unelected managerial power meets the Hot Putsch of loyalist aggression. What emerges isn’t fascism or socialism, but something stranger: a meme-powered technocracy waging war on the bureaucracy of managed decline. Elections still happen. But real power now lies where force meets efficiency, and DOGE is its name.