Tag: town

  • DRAIN THE SWAMP Act seeks to move DC bureaucracy ‘out of crazy town,’ House DOGE leader says

    DRAIN THE SWAMP Act seeks to move DC bureaucracy ‘out of crazy town,’ House DOGE leader says

    EXCLUSIVE: House DOGE Caucus founder Aaron Bean, R-Fla., will put forward the DRAIN THE SWAMP Act this week as part of continuing legislative attempts to target government waste.

    The bill aims to require that federal agency heads relocate about one-third of headquarters-based employees “outside the Beltway” while finding ways to save taxpayer money through moves like selling underused Washington, D.C., office space.

    Bean, who launched the bipartisan DOGE caucus in November, said his bill, which stands for the Decentralizing and Reorganizing Agency Infrastructure Nationwide To Harness Efficient Services, Workforce Administration and Management Priorities Act is what is needed to bring more accountability to Washington’s bureaucracy.

    “The swamp is thick and deep here in crazy town, and I’m here to drain it,” Bean told Fox News Digital Wednesday.

    DOGE MEETS CONGRESS: FL REP LAUNCHES CAUCUS TO HELP MUSK

    The Congressional DOGE Caucus was founded by Florida Congressman Aaron Bean. (House of Representatives/Getty Images)

    “It is time to remind Washington that our duty is to serve the American people,” the Fernandina Beach lawmaker added.

    Agencies exempt from the legislation include the Pentagon, DHS, CIA and NSA, which is based at Fort George G. Meade near Glen Burnie, Maryland.

    The remaining 70% of the federal workforce allowed to remain in and around the district would be required to work in person 100% of the time under the legislation.

    EDUCATION BILL WOULD REQUIRE PARENTAL NOTIFICATION TO TRACE FOREIGN FUNDING OF CURRICULUM AS CHINA LOOKS ON

    The Office of Management and Budget, an executive cabinet agency, would then be directed to work toward selling — or not renewing leases on — office space vacated by the relocated bureaucrats, saving taxpayer funds.

    Bean quipped that the DRAIN THE SWAMP Act will ensure the federal government works for the people “and not the other way around.”

    Sen. Joni Ernst, R-Iowa, Bean’s DOGE counterpart in the upper chamber, also put forward companion legislation, which helps speed up the process of reconciling House and Senate versions of a bill to make it to the president’s desk.

    i270_md

    Washington, D.C.-bound commuters sit in traffic on I-270 near the Capitol Beltway in Bethesda, Md. (Getty)

    “The federal workforce has shown they clearly don’t want to work in D.C., and I am going to make their dreams come true,” said Ernst, who previously highlighted waste, fraud and abuse through her “Squeal Awards” that root out government “pork.”

    Since founding the DOGE caucus, Bean has added two GOP co-chairmen to the ranks — representatives Pete Sessions of Texas and Blake Moore of Utah.

    Sessions, chairman of the House Oversight Subcommittee on Government Operations, previously highlighted the $2.7 trillion in reported fraud and improper government payments over the past 20 years.

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    “This is an absolutely unacceptable misuse of taxpayer dollars. Hardworking Americans deserve a government that works efficiently and effectively,” Sessions said at the time.

    In that regard, the executive branch’s DOGE leader, Elon Musk, said Tuesday from the Oval Office that finding and ending improper and sometimes anonymous payments will save U.S. taxpayers a lot of money. 

    Musk added DOGE oversight led to the discovery that, in at least one instance, Social Security payments were being made to people recorded to be 150 years old.

    Moore holds key roles on the Budget and Ways & Means Committee. 

  • ‘New sheriff in town’: Parents ‘overjoyed’ with Trump’s DEI crackdown, education group says

    ‘New sheriff in town’: Parents ‘overjoyed’ with Trump’s DEI crackdown, education group says

    Parents are “overjoyed” with the trajectory of the education system under President Donald Trump after years of pushing back on so-called woke practices in schools, a parents’ rights education group told Fox News Digital.

    During his first two weeks in office, Trump signed several education-related executive orders on school funding and antisemitism, and launched a federal review of Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion (DEI) practices in federally funded institutions.

    Additionally, the Trump administration launched an investigation into a Colorado school district for allegedly “discriminating against its female students” after a girls’ restroom was reportedly converted into an “all-gender” facility, while the boys’ restroom remained for males only. 

    Nicole Neily, the founder and president of Parents Defending Education, told Fox News Digital in an exclusive interview that the investigation will “open the floodgates” of the Trump administration’s expected crackdown on similar policies in schools across the country.

    TRUMP PUTS HIGHER EDUCATION ON NOTICE FOR ‘DANGEROUS, DEMEANING, AND IMMORAL’ DEI TEACHINGS

    President Donald Trump’s Department of Education has launched a probe into Denver Public Schools over allegedly ‘discriminating against its female students.’ (Evan Vucci)

    “I think what it is intended to do is to send a signal to families that obviously there’s a new sheriff in town. This is a priority. This administration, as the executive orders have made clear, actually views the difference in the sexes to be significant,” Neily told Fox News Digital.

    On Tuesday, the Department of Education sent a letter to the superintendent of Denver Public Schools to sound the alarm over reports that East High School in Denver was in violation of Title IX after opening up a female-only restroom to all genders. 

    “For this to be a very clear signal to families, to students, that if your school has engaged in something similar, this is something that the department is interested in looking into and adjudicating,” Neily said, adding that the investigation is something “families are going to be really encouraged by.” 

    File photo shows Denver East High School in Denver.

    File photo shows Denver East High School in Denver. (David Zalubowski)

    Neily said that in recent years, parents “have been gaslit by our states, by our local school districts, by the federal government” all because “we want our children to have a colorblind education,” but that the educational system is already undergoing “sorely overdue” change under Trump.

    TRUMP’S WRITTEN A DEI GOVERNMENT DEATH SENTENCE. SCHOOL POLICIES SHOULD BE NEXT

    During his first week in office, the president launched a federal review of DEI teachings and practices in educational institutions receiving federal funding, in an effort to restore “merit-based opportunity,” according to the White House.

    President-elect Donald Trump

    President Donald Trump was sworn in as the 47th President of the United States on Monday, Jan. 20, 2025. (Rebecca Noble)

    Trump, prior to being sworn in, said he was open to considering abolishing the Department of Education in order to give states more individual control over their schools. Asked about the idea, Neily said she believes that states “know their communities, their needs, their values better than anybody in Washington ever can or would.”

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    “I think there’s a real opportunity to make sure that the department is focusing on the things it should be, which is educating children, restoring trust in the system and not doing things like giving out the billion dollars in DEI-focused grants,” she said.

  • Holocaust Remembrance Day: A town once inhabited by Nazis reconciles with the past

    Holocaust Remembrance Day: A town once inhabited by Nazis reconciles with the past

    The pristine German college town of Tübingen flourishes today, in stark contrast to its dark past.

    The southwestern city of 90,000 was once home to Theodor Dannecker, a Nazi captain and one of the closest aides to Adolf Eichmann, known as the “architect of the Holocaust.” In 1933, the University of Tübingen, where many of the infamous Nazi soldiers known as SS trained until 1945, proudly billed itself as “Jew free.” These days, Tübingen is acknowledging its painful history in order to rise above it.

    “We can only live here as Christians in this congregation if we take responsibility for the history of this city,” Jobst Bittner, founder of both Tübingen’s TOS Church and the March of Life initiative, where descendants of Nazis organize marches against antisemitism with Christians and Jews throughout the world, told Israel’s Channel 11.

    Nazi descendant Frank Pfeiffer, left, embraces Holocaust survivor Yechiel Aleksander. (March of Life)

    The television outlet’s report showed a banner across the windows of the TOS church that read “Bring Them Home Now,” a call to release nearly 100 Israeli and American hostages held by Hamas in Gaza since Oct. 7, 2023. Inside the church is a store with merchandise and books about Israel. Downstairs is the “Museum of Guilt,” which displays pictures of Nazis from Tübingen, with photographs of mass graves that were once hidden in cigar boxes as souvenirs of the Holocaust.

    CLICK HERE FOR FOX NEWS DIGITAL’S COVERAGE OF ‘ANTISEMITISM EXPOSED’

    Another segment in the report showed young people from the church singing “Am Yisrael Chai” (“The People of Israel Live”) even though they barely know Hebrew. During the holiday of Sukkot, they build sukkahs (temporary huts) to celebrate the Israelites’ freedom from enslavement in Egypt.

    Heinz Reuss, an elder at TOS Church and international director of the March of Life, described last year’s Sukkot celebrated in the Market Square in the center of town as “very beautiful.” He said that the rabbis from the next town came to Tübingen to recite blessings, just like he does during Hanukkah when they light the menorah candles.

    people line up outside

    The former Auschwitz-Birkenau concentration camp that the Nazis ran in occupied Poland is now a memorial and museum. (March of Life)

    The musical, “A Ship Makes History,” based on the story of a Holocaust survivor and Exodus, has also been performed during Hanukkah. Michaela Buckel, program director of the March of Life movement and author of the play, described how it teaches children about the Holocaust in a non-threatening way and that she was inspired by the resiliency of the Jewish people after the Holocaust.

    “I wanted to focus the play on this willingness to live and to fight for new life, even though it’s hard,” she said.

    Reuss said the Christians at his church celebrate some of the Jewish holidays as a gesture of friendship and to acknowledge “that’s where the blessing comes from, the Jewish roots.”

    Addressing the town’s antisemitic history, Reuss remembered a turning point in 2003, when a lot of congregants started to discover that their own family members had been Nazis.

    “It was a powerful time of repentance and also of healing in some way,” he said. 

    woman speaks at podium

    Holocaust survivor Irene Shashar will speak at TOS Church in Tübingen, Germany, on the eve of Holocaust Remembrance Day, which is marked on Jan. 27. (Daina Le Lardic)

    TOS worship leader Kim-Sophie Kasch, 24, told Fox News Digital that when she was 7 years old, after her great-grandfather died, her family discovered that he was a Nazi. He had been part of the Wehrmacht armed forces of Nazi Germany and had been in European areas “where they committed crimes against the Polish-Lithuanian population (and) also the Jews who lived there.”

    Kasch described her father as being “really shocked when he heard about his grandpa.”

    Reuss said that when TOS church congregants found out there were eight concentration camps located around Tübingen, as well as the grim trails of death marches, everything became visible. Everyone saw it.” 

    He described how they organized a prayer march with descendants of Holocaust survivors and descendants of Nazis, which became a three-day event. 

    “It was very, very meaningful for us,” said Reuss. 

    Since 2007, March of Life events have been held in hundreds of cities in more than 20 countries, where Holocaust survivors and descendants of Nazis visit concentration camp sites and mass graves across Europe. 

    In 2009, the movement expanded to the United States, where it became known as the March of Remembrance, a memorial walk every spring on Yom HaShoah, Holocaust and Heroism Remembrance Day.

    “The message is remembrance, reconciliation and making a stand for Israel and against antisemitism,” Reuss said. “It teaches the lessons of the Holocaust, and we encourage people to really face the history of antisemitism in their own families.”

    Reuss said his great-grandfather from the Netherlands, who was an Orthodox reform Christian, saved Jewish lives by refusing to sign a declaration stating that he was not Jewish because he didn’t want to betray his Jewish friends. He expressed disappointment that his German grandfather on his father’s side did not display the same courage and withdrew from Jewish people. 

    “It’s so important to really speak out and not be silent in your personal surroundings and your workspace, because this is antisemitism. It’s evil. It’s something that doesn’t stop with the Jews,” Reuss said.

    Reuss told Fox News Digital how this year, for Holocaust Remembrance Day on Jan. 27, survivor Irene Shashar, who was born on Dec. 12, 1937, as Ruth Lewkowicz, will be honored at the TOS church. She will speak the day before, telling congregants her story of survival in Warsaw.

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    The Nazis invaded Shashar’s homeland of Poland when she was 2 years old, and her father was murdered when she was 5. Shashar credits her mother’s ingenuity for helping her to survive by hiding her in closets and sewers with her beloved doll, Laleczka. Referring to her two children and seven grandchildren at a U.N. speech in 2020, she declared, “I survived … Hitler didn’t win and I have proof.”

  • Bryson DeChambeau using Saudi-funded 5M LIV Golf salary to expand size of town by 200 acres

    Bryson DeChambeau using Saudi-funded $125M LIV Golf salary to expand size of town by 200 acres

    LIV Golfer Bryson DeChambeau has a grand plan for the $125 million he’s receiving from his Saudi Arabian bosses. 

    The controversial 31-year-old golf star said during an interview on “The Joe Pomp Show” he bought 200 acres of land in his hometown of Modesto, California, and plans to expand the town by 30%.

    “We are doing a mega project,” DeChambeau said. “It’s been in the works for a couple of years now, and we’re at the place where we are getting permits to build. People know about it now. 

    “We have acquired massive amounts of land in my hometown, and it’s a three-phase process to build a whole community and increase the size of where I grew up by 30%”

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    Bryson DeChambeau of LIV Golf before The Showdown: McIlroy and Scheffler v. DeChambeau and Koepka at Shadow Creek Golf Course Dec. 16, 2024, in Las Vegas.  (Kevin C. Cox/Getty Images for The Showdown)

    DeChambeau says his intention is to create a prominent golf presence in the community, adding the timeline for completing this project is just over a year. 

    “It’s a full-scale plan, fully thought out. It’s not only to bring golfers to the game but also to bring people to the central valley. You build a community around a multisport complex center,” he said.

    “It’s going to take 12-15 months to get the permits approved for the full scope. It’s over 200 acres of land what we have right now. It’s going to be a multisports complex center — driving range, golf course, residential community center, the whole thing.”

    DeChambeau was paid a reported $125 million to join LIV Golf in June 2022. He says his latest project is only possible because of the massive salary from the Saudi-funded organization.

    WOMEN’S GOLF STAR CHARLEY HULL FAWNS OVER ‘BRILLIANT, LEGEND’ TRUMP AFTER DOING HIS DANCE AT TOURNAMENT

    Bryson DeChambeau

    Bryson DeChambeau reacts after putting on the fifth hole during the third round of the U.S. Open.  (Jim Dedmon/USA Today Sports)

    “A lot of the reason why I have been able to do this is because of LIV. They gave me the economic viability to do these things and the platform to be able to do it, growing on YouTube,” he said. 

    DeChambeau was one of many American golfers to incite widespread backlash from fans for choosing to compete in the Saudi-backed league when it launched due to humanitarian concerns with Saudi Arabia and its relations with the west. 

    Brooks Koepka, Phil Mickelson, Dustin Johnson, Patrick Reed and Jon Rahm were other prominent PGA stars who chose to accept the massive LIV paychecks during the league’s aggressive pursuit of the sport’s biggest names. 

    DeChambeau is also a close friend of President Donald Trump’s and invited Trump to play with him in a video on his YouTube channel. 

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    Bryson DeChambeau celebrates the US Open win

    Bryson DeChambeau cradles the U.S. Open trophy after his win in the final round of the 2024 U.S. Open Championship on the No. 2 Course at The Pinehurst Resort June 16, 2024, in Pinehurst, N.C. (David Cannon/Getty Images)

    DeChambeau told Fox News Digital at the time he had no regrets about it.

    “There’s always risk associated to that. But, from my perspective, it was focused on entertainment,” DeChambeau told Fox News Digital in August at Maridoe Golf Club, site of the LIV Golf Team Championship. 

    “We can talk about politics. That’s a whole different conversation, something that I was not trying to do on my YouTube channel. It was solely on providing great entertainment.”

    DeChambeau joined Trump, Elon Musk and Sen. Ted Cruz, R-Texas, to watch the SpaceX rocket launch in November. 

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