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Inside the Mind of Russell Vought: Trump’s Enforcer

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By Stacy M. Brown, Senior National Correspondent, Black Press of America

Russell Vought wakes each morning with the cold precision of a man who has learned to confuse faith with power. His pen is a weapon, and his calculations are not about progress or prosperity. They are about punishment. He has taken the language of government and turned it into a vocabulary of cruelty. Each budget cut is an act of vengeance. Each withheld dollar is a message to the poor, to the vulnerable, to the people who dare to believe that America still belongs to them. Long before his name became a headline, Vought said that federal workers should be “traumatically affected.” He said he wanted them to wake up, dreading their jobs because he saw public service as an enemy of his mission. That mission has now become law. Through his control of the Office of Management and Budget, Vought has used the machinery of government to dismantle everything that serves the public good.

In cities like New York, Baltimore, Boston, and San Francisco, billions of dollars in Army Corps of Engineers projects have been frozen or canceled. He called it efficiency. Others called it sabotage. The agency’s own records show that nearly all its employees were funded through resources that did not expire when the government shut down. Yet Vought ordered them to stop work, punishing communities that did not vote for his president. “The Democrat shutdown has drained the Army Corps of Engineers’ ability to manage billions of dollars in projects,” he wrote online. That was not true. The shutdown did not drain anything. It was a political hit job on Democratic-led cities, a financial assault dressed up as fiscal restraint. Representative Rosa DeLauro said that what Vought is doing is “illegally stealing taxpayer funding in a unilateral, partisan act.” Her statement is not hyperbole. Congressional investigators and federal courts have already found that Vought has tried to impound or cancel money that Congress legally appropriated. He has blocked research funding for disease prevention, canceled grants for public transit, and withheld small business aid meant to keep communities alive. His so-called “pocket rescissions” have defunded law enforcement programs and cut food assistance for families already hanging by a thread.

In Chicago, $2.1 billion in public transit funds were terminated. In New York, $18 billion for rail modernization vanished without warning. These were not economic decisions. They were political punishments. DeLauro said, “It seems each morning, Russ Vought wakes up determined to abuse his authority to the detriment of working-class families, middle-class families, and vulnerable Americans.” Her words describe a man who believes compassion is weakness and that cruelty is proof of strength. Inside Washington, his reach extends far beyond the budget office. Russell Vought is the silent architect of this government. He has fired or forced out more than 200,000 civil servants under the pretext of so-called reductions in force. A court was forced to step in to block his latest round of firings after evidence showed he was using the Trump shutdown as cover for an illegal purge of federal employees. Congressman Joe Neguse called him “the Grim Reaper.” It is a name that fits. For every program that dies under his orders, another piece of the American safety net disappears. These are not faceless numbers. They are people who tested drinking water for toxins, monitored public health during disease outbreaks, and ensured that disaster recovery funds reached those in need. Their dismissal is not the byproduct of bureaucracy. It is the plan. The fewer people protecting the public, the easier it becomes to destroy what remains of democracy.

Vought calls himself a Christian nationalist. He says America was meant to be a Christian nation. But the Christianity he invokes is not about mercy or justice. It is a creed of domination. When he ordered the cancellation of federal diversity training and removed references to systemic racism from government documents, he was not correcting waste. He was rewriting the story of this country. He was erasing the blood, the struggle, and the truth that built the modern American promise. For Black America, his policies are not abstract. They are a direct blow. His freezes and cancellations have wiped out funding for housing, education, and medical research. Over $400 billion in programs that once served as lifelines to low-income and minority communities are now gone. The cuts have dismantled the very protections that generations fought and died to achieve. This is not the government. It is punishment disguised as policy. Vought’s cruelty is not a side effect. It is the design. Even inside Trump’s inner circle, some quietly admit that it is Vought who holds the real power. He writes the orders, drafts the memos, and decides which programs live or die. What the president says in anger, Vought turns into law. What began as a movement to “shrink government” has become a crusade to starve it, to leave nothing but power in the hands of men who look and think like him.

He once said he wanted bureaucrats to wake up in pain. And that pain has spread far beyond the walls of Washington. It reaches into classrooms without textbooks, into homes without heat, and into clinics where the doors have closed for good. This is what happens when one man’s ideology becomes national policy. It is what happens when faith is twisted into a weapon. Russell Vought has taken the name of God and written it across a ledger of suffering. He has mistaken cruelty for conviction. But America has seen this kind of righteousness before. The men who built segregation, the men who burned crosses, and the men who called their hate holy all believed they were saving the nation. They were not. They were destroying it. History does not forget men like this. It writes their names in shame. As one congressional staffer said, “Russell Vought doesn’t just cut budgets. He cuts people out of democracy.” And that is the truest line ever written about him.



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Introducing CityPickle Kids: Youth Academy 01/06/26

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Introducing CityPickle Kids: Youth Academy at CityPickle Long Island City

CityPickle Kids: Youth Academy Launching Winter 2026, CityPickle is debuting NYC’s first leveled, 12-week junior pickleball program for ages 8–13. Pickleball has emerged as a leader in youth sports, with more than 240 collegiate clubs nationwide (and even varsity programs!). Families are increasingly seeking structured, skill-building opportunities for their children.

CityPickle’s Youth Academy meets that demand with a thoughtfully designed curriculum created by Head of Coaching Josh Gartman, mirroring the rigor and progression of elite junior tennis programs. Players advance through three levels — Competitor, Challenger, and Champion — with coach evaluations at the start and end of each season. The invite-only Champion tier includes tweens and teens with serious talent (and yes, they can already beat most adults).

Winter 2026 Season Details (Jan 6 – Apr 2): Competitor (Level I): Tuesdays, 4–5pm Challenger (Level II): Tuesdays, 4–5pm Champion (Level III, Invite Only): Thursdays, 4–6pm

Venue: CityPickle Long Island City

9-03 44th Rd
Map

203-848-8980





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Youth hockey players hit the ice at TD Garden for mini 1-on-1 tournament – Boston News, Weather, Sports

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BOSTON (WHDH) – Puck drop at TD Garden looked a little different on Sunday as a smaller group of athletes took center ice.

The Boston Bruins and TD Garden hosted the TD Bank Mini One-on-One Tournament with local youth hockey players, which is now in its 53rd year.

Forner USA Hockey President Ronald DeGregorio called it an unforgettable experience.

“They come on the ice and we have a fun time and that’s what it’s all about, a fun learning experience,” he said.

Parents and players agree.

Parent Amy Ditzel said, “I think it’s great to see the girls having the same opportunities.”

And it’s fun for family members and friends, who get to see their favorite players up on the big screen.

“I’m watching my sister and then I’m playing after,” said Caroline. “It’s a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity and a lot of people don’t get to do it.”

(Copyright (c) 2025 Sunbeam Television. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.)

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NFL Flag Football youth league coming to Amarillo this summer

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AMARILLO, Texas (KFDA) – A NFL Flag Football youth initiative is coming to Amarillo. This league catered toward youth is bringing new, non-contact sports for kids to get involved and learn the game of football in a different way while still having fun.

The Texas Panhandle is expanding the opportunity for youth to get more involved this summer through the NFL Flag Football program. This league gives boys and girls in Amarillo the chance to play with an NFL name.

Amarillo native, Tascosa High School alum and program owner and operator for this new initiative Mark Jackson explained why he wanted to bring this opportunity to Amarillo to give youth in the Panhandle the chance to be part of a growing sport and put an emphasis on the importance of inclusivity for the sport.

National reach and local opportunity

“When I had the opportunity to bring it up here because they’re playing all across the nation. Over 500,000 youth across the United States are playing right now. So I said, why not Amarillo? Why not, the kids up here have a chance to play like the kids across the United States and have a chance to, you know, maybe be national champions and go to the Pro Bowl and go to other countries and play,” Jackson said. “So, yeah, that’s why I did it.”

Jackson emphasized the NFL’s commitment to inclusivity.

“Well, that’s one of the NFL’s initiative is to have everybody included. Girls, boys, it doesn’t matter. They want everybody who wants to play to play. That’s what we’re gonna, in Amarillo, we’re gonna give. If you’re a girl, it don’t matter. If you think you can play football or you want to tell your dad or mom, look, I want to play, get out there,” he said.

Registration and schedule

Registration will open in January. Games will start at the end of June and beginning of July.

This league is for boys and girls and open to ages 13 through 17. There is still time to get involved as an athlete or a coach as well.

An official website for this initiative and where people can donate to help this grow will be announced at a later time.



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Girls’ basketball: Brown, Hawks plunder Pirates to reach Berea final | Sports

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BEREA – “Human Nature” couldn’t have been on louder display Sunday afternoon at Conkin Gym if the decades-old Michael Jackson song by that title had been blaring over the speakers.

One of the toughest challenges of coaching youth sports is keeping your troops focused when they’re beating the opponent like a drum. Matt Walls has seen it up-close two days in a row, and at least a half dozen times already this season with his Great Crossing girls’ basketball team.



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Egyptian Swimming Federation Under Scrutiny After Swimmer’s Death

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Egyptian Swimming Federation Under Scrutiny After Swimmer’s Death

The Egyptian Swimming Federation is facing major changes in the wake the death of a swimmer at the national under-12 championships in December in Cairo.

According to Reuters, the federation has been forced to appoint an interim committee to run the organization after the head of the federation and its board were removed last week. The Egyptian Ministry of Youth and Sports has reached out to World Aquatics for interim guidance of the federation.

A swimmer named Youssef Mohamed Abdel Malek drowned during a meet on Dec. 2 at Cairo’s International Stadium swimming complex. Per reports from within the country, Malek’s body was not found until the start of the following race.

Yasser Idris, the head of the swimming federation and a member of the Egyptian Olympic Committee, has been ordered by public prosecutors to stand trial. Also referred for prosecution are the executive director of the swimming federation, its board, the director of the meet, its chief referee, other officials from the Al-Zohour Sporting Club and several lifeguards. All are accused of failure to do their duty in keeping Malek and other swimmers safe.

The Ministry of Youth Sports referred the matter to public prosecution following an investigation that included interviews with witnesses present and reviewing video footage of the incident.

In a statement, the swimming federation said it was halting all activities, “out of respect for public opinion and the family of Youssef Mohamed, pledging full compliance with court rulings and accountability for anyone found negligent.”



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Teaching Generosity: How 4H youth turn the holiday season into a time of service

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Teaching Generosity: How 4H youth turn the holiday season into a time of service

Published 1:09 am Monday, December 29, 2025

“I pledge my head to clearer thinking, my heart to greater loyalty, my hands to larger service, and my health to better living….” Every meeting for 4-H members across the country begins with these familiar words, helping them connect to the values that nurture their growth as young leaders. The phrase “my hands to larger service” goes beyond mere words; it acts as a call to action and a reminder that genuine leadership begins with generosity, compassion, and a readiness to serve others.

The holiday season provides a meaningful opportunity to teach young people the value of generosity. Across the country, 4-H highlights that generosity is a key component of positive youth development, alongside belonging, mastery, and independence. Each element is crucial in fostering confident and compassionate young people. The University of Georgia Extension has long emphasized that learning about generosity helps youth understand how to give back to their communities in meaningful ways, and that 4-H members are committed to improving their “club, community, country, and world.” Research from Tufts University reinforces this message, stating that 4-H youth are four times more likely to make positive contributions to their communities than their peers. During the holiday season, acts of giving, such as volunteering, making cards for seniors, or collecting winter clothing, highlight generosity and help young people develop empathy, leadership, and resilience by teaching them to look beyond themselves. These experiences strengthen communities while instilling confidence and responsibility in youth.

This season is an ideal time to promote generosity. Communities recognize more needs, families are more open to giving, and young people participate in acts of kindness. The holidays emphasize service naturally, and volunteering encourages youth to develop lifelong giving habits. When young people serve together with neighbors, local leaders, and peers, they form meaningful community bonds. These shared experiences foster a sense of belonging and purpose, helping youth see themselves as important members of their community.

Generosity in 4-H isn’t limited to the holidays. It’s a year-round practice that encourages youth to give their time, talents, and energy to meaningful causes. Still, the holiday season provides a unique opportunity to emphasize and celebrate this vital aspect of positive youth development and foster lifelong habits. Ultimately, teaching youth to give during the holidays is more than just a festive activity; it’s an investment in the future. When young people see that generosity can be shown through simple acts of kindness or larger service projects, they carry those lessons into adulthood. The season becomes not just a time of receiving, but a time of shaping caring leaders who will continue to serve and engage their communities.

Meghan Corvin is the County Extension Coordinator and 4-H Youth Development Agent for the University of Georgia Extension, Whitfield County. Contact her at 706.278.8207 or meghan.corvin@uga.edu.



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