Duffy unveiled Amtrak's Freedom 250 Acela train on May 7.Aaron Schwartz/BloombergFrom dinner at the White House for owners of his meme coin to a $400 million jet gifted by a petromonarchy that will be donated to his presidential library after he leaves office, Donald Trump has led the charge on extracting private gains from public office. His Cabinet appears to have absorbed the lesson.Take Sean Duffy, the former Fox host-turned-Secretary of Transportation. On Friday, his department dropped a trailer on YouTube unveiling the Great American Road Trip, an initiative purportedly designed as a “guide to the historic landmarks, open roads, and small towns that tell 250 years of this country’s story.” But what the trailer showed was a reality show in which Duffy, his still-a-Fox-host wife Rachel Campos-Duffy and their nine children gallivant around America. They meet a Ben Franklin impersonator in Philadelphia, ride snowmobiles in Montana and hang out with Kid Rock along the way. All in good fun. “We live in a PornHub world, and this is really good, wholesome family stuff,” Campos-Duffy said in an interview on—where else?—Fox. But as the financing has come into view, the trip looks less like civic uplift than a rolling ethics problem, underwritten by companies in the transportation ecosystem Duffy oversees and, in at least one case, by the Department itself, which underwrote his flights as “part of his official duties.” “The gas in the car, he wasn’t told Shell paid for the gas. He just got in the car and drove it.”