You've lost me when you're going to cut snippets out of context.
In your entire post, you missed the point - is the CG a capability that we need? I think that answer is yes, or else we would have fully mothballed all of them years ago.
And if it is, then we need to replace them. Operational necessity is what drives the procurement. Flag officers having 'fully-informed' conversations are saying they need this capability. It's possible that dozens of people got it wrong, but I doubt it.
I get that Trump is calling their replacement a 'battleship,' but modern CGs are already the size of WWII era battleships.
Yes, it will require investing into shipbuilding and infrastucture to get there. There is quite a bit of risk in execution that's quite easy to poo poo on. But I think that criticism is more easily levied on someone who can't accept that the Emancipation Proclamation was signed at the antique desk in the WH, and not the Gettysburg Address. Which is why I postulate: let's strip back the emotion in assuming / thinking that Trump, Hegseth, and Phelan are incompent idiots, and have a more rational discussion in the CG(N)'s role in modern naval warfare. To the extent that's not possible *shrug*, you're part of the problem.
As for qualified nukes - we have already met FY26 recruitment goals for nukes. There are more people who want to be nukes than jobs available.
When our core gap is in numbers smaller surface combatants, why suddenly take a left turn into a needlessly large and expensive ship?
We can’t build frigates, and our current destroyer fleet has no room for growth? How about we address those problems before wasting money on a ridiculous boondoggle.
If we need more VLS cells, unmanned ships would be far better choices that a massive gold plated monstrosity.
This administration has no strategic vision other than its own self-dealing and glorification. I’d be shocked if a single simulation or war game was done to justify what could be an immense program.