When an administration moves to fragment a national forecasting and research backbone, we all pay in weaker public safety, degraded transparency, and a government that can quietly reroute core capabilities without clear accountability. The described conduct is not clearly criminal on this recordâthere is no documented quid pro quo, fraud, or theftâbut it represents a profound abuse-of-governance pattern: using federal administrative control to dismantle institutional capacity while leaving basic facts unresolved, including who will control the system and on what timeline. Even without a provable federal bribery scheme (18 U.S.C. § 201) or honest-services fraud theory (18 U.S.C. §§ 1343, 1346), this kind of power shift normalizes politicized reorganization of critical infrastructure and invites future coercion by making scientific and operational capacity contingent on political favor.