they should explicitly not make a profit. they should reinvest anything left over in infrastructure improvements.
Microblog Memes
A place to share screenshots of Microblog posts, whether from Mastodon, tumblr, ~~Twitter~~ X, KBin, Threads or elsewhere.
Created as an evolution of White People Twitter and other tweet-capture subreddits.
RULES:
- Your post must be a screen capture of a microblog-type post that includes the UI of the site it came from, preferably also including the avatar and username of the original poster. Including relevant comments made to the original post is encouraged.
- Your post, included comments, or your title/comment should include some kind of commentary or remark on the subject of the screen capture. Your title must include at least one word relevant to your post.
- You are encouraged to provide a link back to the source of your screen capture in the body of your post.
- Current politics and news are allowed, but discouraged. There MUST be some kind of human commentary/reaction included (either by the original poster or you). Just news articles or headlines will be deleted.
- Doctored posts/images and AI are allowed, but discouraged. You MUST indicate this in your post (even if you didn't originally know). If an image is found to be fabricated or edited in any way and it is not properly labeled, it will be deleted.
- Absolutely no NSFL content.
- Be nice. Don't take anything personally. Take political debates to the appropriate communities. Take personal disagreements & arguments to private messages.
- No advertising, brand promotion, or guerrilla marketing.
RELATED COMMUNITIES:
The entire point of government is to correct for market failures. Public services shouldn't try to make a profit, because if something were profitable the private sector would've provided it already.
The "profit" of a government service comes in the form of positive externalities.

Found this amusing earlier 😉
In fact, it would be detrimental to their budget to do so. If I'm budgeting various government services and see that a specific service is consistently ending the year with a lot of unspent money, I'll lower their budget so that the money can be spent where it's needed.
This is actually a bad thing that leads to wasteful spending. Use it or lose it budgeting creates perverse incentives to continuously spend.
I think it's easy to misunderstand the difference between appropriated money (money someone is allowed to spend) and spent money (money that's used, adds to the debt, etc). If you do something like allow a large portion of unspent allocation to roll over to future years (like... 95%) then some departments/agencies/etc will save up huge stockpiles of allocation - like places that will need to replace a satellite or renovate a large office building, or buy a new piece of land, or... Etc. This doesn't add anything to the national debt, but makes for a scary headline - which is practically the worst thing for Congress.
The likely outcome would be lower spending, but there's the faintest possibility that every civil servant in the whole government simultaneously decides that this is the year to renovate their office building, buy new computers, upgrade the coffee machine, and stock up on printer ink... And that would be very expensive, that year.
Government departments don't get to roll over money, that's partially the problem.
As someone who has worked in the public sector for nearly two decades, this is spot on. The real fix would be to modify government accounting laws so that appropriated funding doesn't just expire at the end of any given fiscal year, or at a bare minimum make fiscal years longer than 12 months and have them overlap each other to some extent.
You're right, I didn't consider that viewpoint. However, I think this problem might not always be the case, especially in a nation with few problems related to corruption or general lack of checks and balances. If you have functioning oversight and annual presentation of projected expenditures, frivolous spending shouldn't be a major issue.
They are paid by citizens in the form of taxes in a sane society.
Edit: Including companies and billionaires, which should take the lead.
Billionaires should not exist in a sane society. Money isn’t just a prize for doing well, it’s unelected power, and people use it as an excuse to be selfish and shitty.
It’s like Reddit karma IRL.