You're right... We should definitely strip something like a suicide hotline down to the absolute bare minimum. Maybe we should also advertise when the hotline's peak hours are or when they're short staffed. Wouldn't want someone having a crisis at an inconvenient time (when the numbers are down or too many calls maybe be coming in) to be answered since we just cut the number of employees available to answer such calls.
I'm sorry and generally don't attack, but this is possibly the most cringeworthy response based on nothing but uncertainty. And maybe it's nothing more then me over reacting because I work in the mental health field and have lost a number of clients recently due to suicide, or maybe because just this morning I read about Jocelynn Rojo Carranza, an 11 year old school girl from Texas, that just took her life after bullies threatened to call ICE agents to deport her and her family.
You talk about all the money saved in such a short time, and tell those opposed to simply wait and see what kind of good comes from it in the long run. Here's the problem. There's just as much negativity and reason for concerns that has come in the short time he's in office that you can't simply make a "wait and see what good can come from it" without trying to weight the shitstorm that could just as easily be on the horizon.
There is not a monetary value to a life. We can talk about how much money is being saved by the government, but lives are being destroyed and affected by DOGE cuts. I spent months listening to MAGA throw Lakin Riley's name around using it as a single example of how we failed to secure the border. Am I going to hear MAGA use the same argument regarding Jocelynn Carranza taking her life as the result of a political policy? Big Picture is there is so much change going on right now simply to make changes that there's no telling what will happen long, but short term mistakes have been/are currently being made and that cannot continue.