President Donald Trump shared a SpongeBob square-themed meme after Elon Musk announced last week that he would receive an email asking for information about what they had achieved.
The meme has a list entitled “I went last week.” Five items on the list include “Screams about Trump,” “Screams about Elon,” “I went into the office once,” “Read some emails,” and “Screams more about Trump and Elon.” there is.
Trump shared a meme about the True Society shortly after Musk shared it on X.
The bureaucratic “cannibalism in our country” lawmaker expressed sympathy for federal workers facing recruitment,
President Donald Trump greets Elon Musk when he arrives to attend to view the launch of the SpaceX Starship rocket's 6th Test Flight, held in Brownsville, Texas on November 19, 2024. (Brandon Bell/Getty Images)
Musk previously said, “In line with President @realdonaldtrump's instructions, all federal employees will receive an email promptly requesting a request to understand what they did last week. Failed response is considered a resignation.”
The announcement comes as the Trump administration is trying to reduce massive federal bureaucracy as Musk attempts to reveal government waste, fraud and abuse.
“We've already received a lot of good responses, and these are the people that should be considered for promotion,” Musk said in another tweet.
Elon Musk says federal employees must fill out or resign in productivity reports
However, some people are disputing emails sent to government workers.
Alaska GOP Sen. Lisa Murkovsky called it “absurd.”
“Our public workforce deserves to be treated with dignity and respect for non-current work that they have not done. Absurd weekend emails to justify their existence are not. There was none,” she declared in X's post.
Minnesota Democratic Sen. Tina Smith blows up musk.
“This is the ultimate d— move from the musk from the boss – except that he's not even a boss, he's just a d–,” she tweeted.
Musk told the senator, “What did you do last week?”
DoD tells the private workforce to ignore Elon Musk's demands to report productivity
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The Pentagon told workers to pause their response to an OPM email titled “What did you do last week?”,” the Pentagon said in X.
FBI Director Kash Patel similarly instructed workers to “suspend the answer.”
According to the New York Times, National Intelligence's director of Tulsi Gabbard told workers in the Intelligence Email community not to reply to emails. “Given the inherently sensitive and categorized nature of our work, IC employees should not respond to OPM emails,” she pointed out, according to the outlet.
Fox News Digital emailed the National Intelligence Director's office on Monday to request comment.
David Spunt of Fox News contributed to this report





