nekusar a day ago

A far as I'm concerned, they're just intentionally failing to do their job. And they *all* in congress should be fired for job abandonment. And yes, rerun elections, with those idiots not allowed to run.

After all, when I look at my W2 (yeah, I'm a working stiff), they sure as hell are taking out taxes still. That aint "shut down". It's a scam.

Something about "taxation without representation". I think we went to war over that before.

  • maest a day ago

    A failure like this would immediately trigger reelections in the UK. It's a strong incentive to not shut down the government.

    There is no serious incentive to avoid this in the US. In fact, you're incentivised to be complicit in the shutdown and then blame the other party.

    • rainsford a day ago

      One incentive that could work in the US without having to completely change how elections work would be for the government to actually shut down when it runs out of money. Shut downs are only remotely politically viable because nearly all the parts of the government that people regularly rely on more or less keep working.

      This means the public backlash from shutting down the government is significantly muted, and it gives the opportunity for some less intelligent people to point to it as proof the government doesn't actually do anything. But it only works because the government basically forces employees in those roles to work for free with the promise of being eventually paid at some point, which is pretty weird when you really think about it.

      Consider an alternate version of events where the government running out of money means all government functions immediately cease. No airport security, no air traffic control. Federal law enforcement goes home. The military stands down. Every federal government function stops October 1st since there was no longer any money to pay for it. Not only would the government not still be shut down, it never would have shut down since the impact would be so immediate and so significant that politicians would never risk it actually happening.

    • nelox a day ago

      Indeed. In Australia, a government was once dismissed after failing to pass supply bills in the Senate (Supply bills allocate money to the government). The Governor-General resolved the deadlock by dissolving Parliament and calling an election. The event is known as “The Dismissal”. It remains one of the key examples of the Governor-General’s reserve powers in action.

      • ghoul2 12 hours ago

        Isn't this "as intended" in the westminster-style system? The govt is formed by MPs from the majority party (or alliance). By definition they MUST be able to pass ALL money bills, which only require a simple majority. Any failure to pass a money bill is equivalent to the govt no longer holding a majority support in parliament. And that means either the king/president/govgen invites someone else from the current parliament who they have good reason to believe DOES (potentially) have support of majority of the parliament, or dissolve the parliament and call fresh elections if there is no such majority.

        I am not quite sure why an action with such a clear established precedent be considered foreign interference? or was it the case that there WAS a suitable candidate with a possible majority but they were NOT invited by the govgen to try and win a trust vote in parliament?

        • defrost 12 hours ago

          It was very much an edge case, with one of Whitlam's senators on leave and recent changes to territory rules giving additional senators to the opposition party (as I recall ...) the ability to block supply appeared suddenly out of the blue.

          Whitlam did move to call an election (rather than be sacked) which likely would have removed the blocked supply threat as he was at the time an extremely popular PM in Australia (loved by the common masses, despised by many elites) .. and when attending the Queens Repreresentative (the Governor General) to advise about calling an election .. he was removed by the G-G.

          Strictly speaking the "as intended" outcome should have been to resolve a looming (not yet happened) supply crisis by allowing the people of Australia to vote, instead the government of the day (Whitlam's) was removed on a technical reading against the spirit of intended resolution.

          There's a peer comment here that linked to a 2020 article on the finally released royal correspondance that's worth a read. The US influence angle has merit also, they had weight in the game for sure, how much and whether it tipped the balance is debatable.

          Literally reams of contraversay here, the G-G acted autonomously and likely to save his own neck as Whitlam intended to replace the G-G, additionally many outside powers (the UK and the US) were whispering in the ears of those with levers to pull seeking to dump Whitlam; he was returning real power to the people, providing socialised health and education to the masses, asking questions about the role of secret American bases on AU soil, etc.

          This was, indeed, extremely serious stuff: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=A4jfR2u_9Kk

      • ytoawwhra92 17 hours ago

        The Dismissal is not an example of the Australian system working as intended.

    • Esophagus4 a day ago

      In general, this is by design in The States.

      The system is setup to prevent political opportunism and provide predictability and rigidity of the system at the expense of being slower to respond to constituents.

      The incentive is still there, it’s just a few years off in the next election.

      (That being said… sighing loudly as he gestures around him at all the political opportunism…)

    • nekusar a day ago

      > There is no serious incentive to avoid this in the US. In fact, you're incentivised to be complicit in the shutdown and then blame the other party.

      Which is precisely what's happening.

      Im frankly done with the children bickering. But in all seriousness, neither party really cares about us. Republicans are engorged with the tech neofascists, and the democrats are caught up with special interest du jour, with a healthy smattering of surveillance as well.

      Ive seen how the governments (local, state, federal) operate. It's fucked, and its going to be a long time to fix it, if possible.

      Not sure what my plans are, honestly. Take it as I can, i guess.

  • BlackjackCF a day ago

    The US really needs formalized processes for snap elections and easier ability to recall elected officials. The fact that this is happening and we all just have to sit on our hands and wait for the next election is wild.

    • ryandrake a day ago

      This is being done by the people America collectively elected. Moar Elections is not going to help. Enough Americans want this chaos and deliberately voted for it.

      • SR2Z a day ago

        Unless your theory is that the median voter is kind of an idiot who doesn't understand how the government works and goes based on vibes.

        Such a person would ignore any issue short of, say, their paychecks or SSA benefits not arriving on time. After that, who knows who they would support?

        Democrats have a lot less to lose than the GOP right now. The party is unpopular and locked out of power. There's only upside to shutting the government down, if you ignore the very serious impacts on normal people.

        Trump is not capable of seeing this because he reflexively has to win every conflict he's involved in.

        • atmavatar a day ago

          There was nothing to stop the Republican party from unilaterally averting the shutdown, and there's nothing stopping them from unilaterally ending it. They have the majority in both houses as well as the presidency, so they can pass anything they like.

          The only road bump in place is the Senate filibuster rule - but that's a rule that can be (and has been) tossed aside when inconvenient. Recall that Republicans removed the filibuster from judicial appointments when they wanted to ram through multiple Supreme Court justices and hundreds of lower court judges.

          The underlying problem is that the current Republican party wants this shutdown because it reinforces their half-century-long message that government is broken and gives them cover to remove federal workers.

          It also doesn't help that the House is remaining closed to delay seating an incoming Democrat representative from an Arizona special election.

          Expect this shutdown to continue for a while.

        • ryandrake a day ago

          > Unless your theory is that the median voter is kind of an idiot who doesn't understand how the government works and goes based on vibes.

          I think the median voter looks at what a politician says they are going to do, assumes they are going to do it, and votes based on that. Say what you will about the Trump administration, they are doing exactly what they were shouting from the rooftops that they would do. Grief people they don't like, sow chaos and division, start a devastating trade war on multiple fronts, and cause daily chaos and drama. They said it loud and clear for years before the election. They got elected. And, then they did it!

          If I had anything good to say about these guys it's that they were 100% transparent about their plans and they followed up on them right out of the gate. Exactly zero people should be surprised at what they delivered. It's actually pretty impressive how faithfully they are delivering on all of their promises of destruction and chaos! In fact, polls of Republicans show consistent, strong and enthusiastic approval of the administrations actions, as they themselves fall deeper into poverty and hopelessness.

          • mandeepj 20 hours ago

            > they are doing exactly what they were shouting from the rooftops that they would do.

            You mean lower prices on day 1?

            Unfortunately some of us still remember those outlandish promises which we knew will remain just promises.

            Doesn’t matter how much you push his promises under the rug, but we will not forget - how big of a fraud and scammer the current sitting president is.

            Did they also shout - 51st state, crypto scams, private funding deals etc etc?

            • wredcoll 19 hours ago

              Yes, they shouted that they would commit fraud and accept bribes. Apparently people are fine with that and voted for it.

              • mandeepj 4 hours ago

                Nope! They definitely didn’t say that! Doesn’t matter how much people from your tribe try to normalize it, that wouldn’t happen.

                • wredcoll 2 hours ago

                  What? Donald Trump regularly accepts bribes, he did it before during and after his presidency. He was elected anyways. People just don't care.

        • walkabout 12 hours ago

          > Unless your theory is that the median voter is kind of an idiot who doesn't understand how the government works and goes based on vibes.

          Um.

          Yes that’s basically true, to the best of science’s reckoning, anyway. Like, you pretty much nailed it.

          Political scientists had figured that out with very solid evidence by around the middle of the 20th century (solid evidence in part because this is obviously alarming so they did a lot of double-checking) then spent several decades trying to figure out an angle by which they could say “but it’s, uh, fine somehow?” or maybe even “but actually that’s good” before finally giving up on that and admitting it’s kind of amazing democracy works at all, and the whole thing’s scary-fragile.

  • nitwit005 17 hours ago

    The Republican voters have responded very harshly to people seen as compromising with Democrats. Increasingly that's also true of Democratic voters, as they see their leadership as giving in to Republicans.

    Unless that changes, you just get back to the same situation.

  • lithobraking a day ago

    >After all, when I look at my W2 (yeah, I'm a working stiff), they sure as hell are taking out taxes still. That aint "shut down". It's a scam.

    This is because a significant amount of the government is still running. [1] Around 50% of gov employees are currently working without pay (but with expected backpay). If _everyone_ stopped working major systems would immediately be disrupted: The military would stop all operations. Planes would be grounded. Weather predictions would cease to exist. Food & pharmaceuticals wouldn't be screened. Participants in medical studies would stop getting treatments. etc.

    Contractors are also capable covering expenses with overhead. But soon, many will run out. For example, the contractors who perform nuclear weapons research [2]. At which time, they will have to shut down and employees will be furloughed without guarantee of backpay. (The current expectation is unpaid leave) As someone who works in a related civilian field this would severely impact our mission and the folks who work here. Especially the newer ones like postdocs who may not have much savings.

    [1]: https://www.reuters.com/legal/litigation/who-is-still-workin...

    [2]: https://sourcenm.com/2025/10/17/doe-secretary-nnsa-to-furlou...

  • mulmen a day ago

    > And they all in congress should be fired for job abandonment. And yes, rerun elections, with those idiots not allowed to run.

    I find these takes very tiresome. What kind of insight can you draw from this all or nothing thinking? It’s reductive and uninteresting.

    Not all elected representatives are refusing to work. Collective punishment creates an opportunity for bad actors to force an election and remove their colleagues from office.

    > After all, when I look at my W2 (yeah, I'm a working stiff), they sure as hell are taking out taxes still. That aint "shut down". It's a scam.

    Well yeah, of course they are. You still owe taxes. When the government reopens the taxes you pay will still be allocated.

    > Something about "taxation without representation". I think we went to war over that before.

    This is not what was meant by taxation without representation. We do have elected representation, even in a government shutdown. Congress refusing to work is not a consequence of the government shutdown, it is a political choice made by elected representatives.

    • thunky 21 hours ago

      > Well yeah, of course they are. You still owe taxes. When the government reopens the taxes you pay will still be allocated.

      I think you missed the point. If the government is doing less due to shutdown, taxes should be less.

      • mulmen 21 hours ago

        I didn't miss the point. The point doesn't hold up to scrutiny. The system you propose would create a perverse incentive for obstructionists to shut government down permanently to never pay taxes.

        • thunky 9 hours ago

          > a perverse incentive for obstructionists to shut government

          That doesn't make any sense. A politically manufactured government shutdown isn't the only way to reduce government or taxes.

          But regardless, fear of poor incentives hasn't stopped us from getting to where we are now. Bad incentives are everywhere. This shutdown itself is the result of bad incentives.

          Your argument is the one that doesn't stand up to scrutiny.

  • JumpCrisscross a day ago

    > they're just intentionally failing to do their job

    How is this a hot take? The debt ceiling is statute. Electeds are doing what their voters want them to do. Until shutdowns result in a bipartisan anti-incumbency wave, they won’t go away. (The electoral consequences of shutting down the government are mixed at best.)

alecsm a day ago

This uptime monitor must be streaming illegal football (soccer) because it's blocked in Spain.

    IP              Provider                       Status
    188.114.97.5 AS13335 (CLOUDFLARENET, US)     Blocked
    188.114.96.5 AS13335 (CLOUDFLARENET, US)     Blocked
And the funny thing is free football is working as always. I know because a friend is watching a game right now while he comments on HN.
  • prmoustache a day ago

    cloudflare. Most of the internet behind cloudflare is blocked whenever there are football being played in La Liga (the Spanish League).

  • drnick1 a day ago

    This is outrageous. Does Spain have a "Great Firewall" like China?

    • alecsm a day ago

      No, they just make all ISP operating in the country mass block IPs.

      • sunaookami 15 hours ago

        And one of the biggest ISPs, Telefonica, holds the rights to the soccer matches so they happily comply!

    • sunaookami 15 hours ago

      Every EU country has one, on nation- and on EU-level.

      • CaptainOfCoit 12 hours ago

        > and on EU-level

        Are you claiming there is a EU-wide firewall that EU could use (not the countries themselves) to block arbitrary websites? The EU hate on HN is reaching conspiracy-type levels now it seems.

        • sunaookami 4 hours ago

          RT.com, Sputnik News, etc. are blocked by the EU and the EU countries have to obey it, they have no say in this. This was done by Von der Leyen without any parliamentary oversight. It doesn't matter what your view on these sites is, it was a dangerous precedent. It also affects the TV stations.

port3000 a day ago

Love it. However if this were realistic, it would say Partial outage so as to not trigger the SLAs

  • candiddevmike a day ago

    Sorry for the inconvenience, we're currently pausing some services to avoid releasing the Epstein files.

neckardt a day ago

Love it! One nit: the % number jiggles around. This can be fixed either by left aligning the number, or by using a monospaced font.

  • sherry-sherry a day ago

    Or using ‘tabular figures’ for the numbers. It keeps just the number widths the same. I believe it’s ‘font-variant-numeric: tabular-nums;’ in CSS.

    I often see it on sports broadcasts, or anything with a counter where the number changes and makes the rest of the line ‘jiggle’.

issung 18 hours ago

The percentages should be counting upwards for the departments that are currently operational, instead they are currently static :)

  • xboxnolifes 7 hours ago

    Its a 15 year window. They don't go up until the disruptions fall outside of the window.

pizlonator a day ago

Yeah but like this isn't funny anymore guys

  • Marsymars a day ago

    It's kinda funny if you don't live in the US.

    • tjwebbnorfolk a day ago

      I live in the US, and it's still kinda funny. Mostly not, but is kinda.

    • viraptor a day ago

      People outside the US pay attention and all the mess created/enabled there is actually appealing to some. I'd say it's funny in isolation, until my highschool friend mentioned that we should have our own Trump to stop Muslims coming in. It's a shitty example to the world.

  • slater a day ago

    i'd say go tell the felon(s) in the white house, but they're currently busy having a gold-encrusted ball room built

    • ryandrake a day ago

      He's also busy shitposting AI slop videos[1] of himself. Man's got to have priorities.

      1: https://old.reddit.com/r/Fauxmoi/comments/1oaemj3/trump_post...

      • sph 4 hours ago

        Not even Idiocracy could imagine such immense stupidity. Pure brainrot. The USA are not a serious country anymore.

      • anonymousiam a day ago

        Trump seems to have no inhibitions about his posts.

        To be fair though, this shutdown was brought about by Congress. The Senate has not approved a bill, so the POTUS has nothing to sign.

        • hypeatei a day ago

          The President typically has a lot of influence over party members in normal times, the Republican sychopants who are in Congress now will do whatever he says. A bipartisan border bill was killed before Trump even got re-elected[0] simply because he didn't want it passed.

          0: https://www.nbcnews.com/politics/congress/republicans-kill-b...

          • anonymousiam 4 hours ago

            Face it: The lobbyists own congress. This shutdown exists because one group of lobbyists is unhappy about the gravy train drying up.

    • hypeatei a day ago

      And scheduling a call between Indonesia's President and Eric Trump[0].

      > In a private exchange picked up by microphones, the Indonesian leader asked to meet Eric Trump, to which the president answered, “I’ll have Eric call you,”

      > We’re building a great hotel, and that’s going to start very soon. And I never met the president, and I used to go over there quite a bit. And obviously we manage teams over there, and it’s pretty amazing that he knew who I was. And, you know, it’s obviously — I don’t get involved in politics in Indonesia — but when I heard that, I started laughing. ‘Can I please meet Eric?’ He must know the projects very well.

      0: https://www.msnbc.com/top-stories/latest/eric-trump-indonesi...

superfunny a day ago

Needs to go back further - there were shutdowns 30 years ago

nadermx a day ago

I applaud this. "Your tax dollars at rest"

  • delichon a day ago

    They can come home, all is forgiven.

daft_pink a day ago

Wish there was a simple way to get updates on large swings in the government shut down poly market.

I’d really like to know when things are shifting without having to watch the stupid news every day.

jakozaur a day ago

(Tech) Debt seems to be a frequent cause of (Tech) outages.

hdaz0017 a day ago

- if governement is down does that mean citzans do not have to pay any taxes

- All US workers need to go on strike until you get a government that works for the whole population ;)

atmavatar a day ago

It's too bad the page only goes back 15 years.

It would be a bit cooler if it went all the way back to the first government shutdown under Carter.

lionelholt a day ago

Energy > National Nuclear Security Administration (civilian)

Should we be concerned about that being shut down?

0xblinq a day ago

Where's the up time monitor for this site? It seems to be down.

stefan_ a day ago

This says "USDA operational"

cyberax a day ago

"Have you tried turning it off and on?"