In response to the CDC, Hispanic dialysis sufferers have a 40% greater threat of staph an infection than whites

Hispanic dialysis patients are at a 40% higher risk of developing a staph infection compared to whites, according to new data released Monday by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, underscoring the economic and racial disparities in the U.S. healthcare system.

Adults who are on dialysis for kidney failure were 100 times more likely to get staph infections compared to the general US population, according to the CDC. Needles and catheters are used to connect patients to dialysis, and bacteria such as staph can enter a patient’s bloodstream during the process. Staph infections are serious and sometimes fatal.

“Overall, it is believed that the second leading cause of death in dialysis patients is infection — all infections, not just bloodstream infections,” said Dr. Shannon Novosad, head of the CDC’s dialysis safety team, told reporters during a call Monday. “They are also one of the leading causes of hospitalization for these patients.”

According to the CDC, more than 800,000 people in the US are living with kidney failure, 70% of whom require dialysis.

However, people of color are at an even higher risk of kidney failure, which accounts for more than half of dialysis patients. According to CDC data, the rate of kidney failure is four times higher in blacks and twice higher in Hispanics than whites. Blacks make up 33% of all dialysis patients in the US.

Black and Hispanic dialysis patients were also more likely to get staph infections than white patients, the CDC said. The data analyzing dialysis patients from 2017 to 2020 did not conclusively calculate the increased risk for black patients. However, Hispanic patients were at a 40% higher risk of staph infection than whites, according to the CDC.

The CDC said in a statement that the unadjusted rate of staph bloodstream infections was 23% higher in black patients than white patients, but when adjusted for other factors, they were not at greater risk.

“It’s still important to highlight these increased rates because staph infections are more common among black dialysis patients, but there are other factors contributing to these increased rates outside of race alone,” CDC spokeswoman Martha Sharan said.

According to Novosad, more dialysis patients with staph infections lived in areas with higher poverty, more households and lower educational levels. About 42% of staph infections in dialysis patients occurred in areas with the highest poverty, she said.

The CDC study examined data from select counties in seven states from 2017 to 2020. The states are California, Connecticut, Georgia, Maryland, New York, Tennessee and Minnesota.

Bloodstream infections in dialysis patients decreased 40% from 2014 to 2019, according to the CDC, due to staff and patient education on prevention. Using fistulas and grafts to connect a patient’s bloodstream to the dialysis machine reduces the risk of infection compared to catheters.

“Prevention of staph infections begins with recognizing chronic kidney disease in its early stages to prevent or delay the need for dialysis,” said CDC Chief Medical Officer Dr. Debra Houry.

Man sentenced to 16 years for taking pictures at kids for throwing snowballs

A man named William Carson from Milwaukee, Wisconsin, has been sentenced to 16 years in prison and his reaction to some neighborhood kids fooling around in the snow has been gross.

He received 16 years for shooting at a group of children

William was hit with the verdict last Friday, according to FOX6 News Milwaukee, and it’s related to an incident that happened more than three years ago.

Back then, on January 4, 2020, a group of about seven children threw snowballs at cars on the north side of Milwaukee. After Williams’ car was hit by a snowball, the man turned, exited the vehicle, and fired a volley of gunfire as the children fled in desperation.

Two of the seven children were beaten, with one hit in the arm and the other sustaining a thigh injury. A third child’s jacket was also hit by a bullet.

After fleeing the scene, William was arrested a few days later and arrested while driving under the influence of alcohol. He was also found with a gun, and tests showed it was “highly likely” that it was the same firearm that was used to shoot at the children.

As a result, William Carson was charged with two counts of first-degree reckless injury and five counts of first-degree reckless endangerment of security.

The prosecutors initially asked for a prison sentence of 25 years

While William is away for some time, prosecutors reportedly wanted to get him sentenced to 25 years in prison.

That sentiment was supported by the testimony of Monique Wilbourn, the mother of one of the children involved in the ordeal.

“You really hurt us, and I really want you to pay for what you did to my family.”

Although the sentence was less than prosecutors demanded, we should add that William Carson will face extended custody for ten years after his release.

How do you assess the overall situation?

Supreme Courtroom abortion ruling challenged by decide

Agnes Scott college student Jordan Simi (C) takes part in a chant during a pro-abortion rights march and rally held in response to the leak of a draft U.S. Supreme Court majority opinion led by Justice Samuel Alito was written to overturn a majority of the court in the landmark Roe v. Wade later that year in Atlanta, Georgia, May 3, 2022.

Alyssa Pointer | Reuters

A federal judge suggested Monday that the state’s right to abortion — which the Supreme Court overturned last year — could continue to be protected by the 13th Amendment to the Constitution, which abolished slavery.

Judge Colleen Kollar-Kotelly advanced this surprising hypothesis in a court order in a criminal case against an anti-abortion group accused of blocking access to an abortion clinic in Washington, DC

Kollar-Kotelly’s order called for prosecutors and defense attorneys to file briefs by next month on whether the Supreme Court ruling addresses only the issue of whether abortion is not a right to abortion through the 14.”

Their order in Washington District Court could become an invitation to state challenges on 13th Amendment grounds to state statutes restricting access to abortion in some states following the controversial High Court decision upholding the 1973 Roe v . Wade was lifted, severely restricted. The order was previously reported by Politico.

US District Judge Colleen Kollar-Kotelly

Charles Dharapak | AP

The 14th Amendment includes several rights, including citizenship rights and a government prohibition on “depriving any person of life, liberty, or property without due process of law.”

The due process clause in this amendment was a cornerstone of the previous Supreme Court ruling in Roe v. Wade, which first established federal abortion law.

But Kollar-Kotelly wrote in her order that the 13th Amendment “received considerable attention among scholars and, briefly, in a federal appeals court decision” on whether this section of the Constitution could apply to abortion.

A 1990 paper by a Northwestern University School of Law professor found that the 13th Amendment, with its prohibition on forced labor, provides a textual basis for abortion rights.

“When women are forced to bear and give birth to children, they are subjected to “involuntary servitude” in violation” of this amendment,” wrote the paper’s author Andrew Koppelman, quoted by Kollar-Kotelly in her order.

In a 1995 decision on an issue of attorneys’ fees in a case challenging Utah’s abortion law, a panel of judges from the U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals for the 10th Circuit said that a district court judge was wrong to set fees because the arguments on the other hand, the law citing the 13th Amendment is frivolous.

“Without commenting on the merits of the involuntary bondage argument, we do not consider it frivolous,” the appeals body wrote.

CNBC Policy

Read more about CNBC’s political coverage:

  • Watch Live: US House Speaker Kevin McCarthy speaks on the debt ceiling
  • Not raising the US debt ceiling would result in “economic and financial catastrophe,” says Yellen
  • George Santos denies allegations of sexual harassment by a former potential employee
  • Neo-Nazi and woman charged with conspiracy to attack Maryland power grid
  • Biden delivers State of the Union address amid high inflation, a divided Congress threatening to derail the economy
  • Chinese spy balloon fallout rocks Washington and Beijing
  • Trump is appealing for nearly $1 million in sanctions for a ‘frivolous’ lawsuit he filed against Hillary Clinton
  • Criminals Use Telegram to Recruit “Hikers” as America’s Big Banks Record an 84% Increase in Check Fraud
  • Rep. George Santos’ New York office vandalized with graffiti, police say
  • Decades of low unemployment is welcome news for Biden ahead of the State of the Union
  • China’s suspected spy balloon prompts Blinken to delay trip to Beijing as Congress seeks answers
  • Debt ceiling no closer as McCarthy and Biden pledge to continue talks
  • Suspicious Chinese spy balloon found over northern US
  • Republicans vote to remove Rep. Ilhan Omar from the Foreign Affairs Committee
  • Sen. Kyrsten Sinema is siphoning money off of Wall Street, the real estate titans, as she ponders re-election
  • Nancy Pelosi supports Adam Schiff in the California Senate race if Senator Dianne Feinstein does not run
  • Biden-McCarthy meeting yields no deal on debt ceiling but spokesman says markets should be encouraged
  • Russia has committed more than 65,000 war crimes in Ukraine, prosecutor general says
  • The 2024 GOP presidential primary is taking shape as Trump’s potential rivals Haley, Scott and Pence make moves

The judge’s order comes in a case in which Lauren Handy, a Virginia resident, and nine other anti-abortion activists were charged in an indictment last year for conspiring to block access to a Washington abortion clinic on Oct. 22, 2020 to block.

Handy and the other defendants have asked Kollar-Kotelly, who was appointed to the Washington District Court by ex-President Bill Clinton, to dismiss the charges of lack of jurisdiction.

Her argument is based, at least in part, on the reasoning that the majority opinion of Justice Samuel Alito’s court last year in what was considered Dobbs v. Jackson Women’s Health Organization noted in the case that “the Constitution does not grant a right to an abortion,” the judge noted in her order.

But Kollar-Kotelly wrote that this argument “is based on the false legal premise that the federal law cited in the indictment “regulates only access to abortion,” when in fact it also regulates access to a broad category of reproductive health services.”

“Nonetheless, to the extent that the defendants seek a resolution of this matter through a constitutional decision, the court will require additional notice,” Kollar-Kotelly wrote.

The judge wrote that the question before the High Court in Dobbs “was not whether any provision of the Constitution provides for a right to an abortion”.

“Rather, the question before the court at Dobbs was whether the Fourteenth Amendment provided such a right,” Kollar-Kotelly wrote.

“Therefore, neither the majority nor the dissent in Dobbs analyzed anything other than the Fourteenth Amendment,” she wrote. “Indeed, according to the court’s initial review, not a single one [friend-of-the-court] The letter mentioned anything other than the Fourteenth Amendment and the unratified Equality Amendment.”

The due process clause of the 14th Amendment was upheld by the Supreme Court in Roe v. Citing Wade noting that included in this clause and elsewhere in the Constitution was a right to privacy that gave people the right to an abortion until a fetus became viable.

In its ruling excluding Roe, the Supreme Court wrote in its majority opinion that the 14th Amendment “clearly fails to protect the right to an abortion”.

Kollar-Kotelly wrote that “it is quite possible that the court at Dobbs would have held that another provision of the Constitution provided a right of access to reproductive services had that issue been raised.”

“It wasn’t addressed, however,” she noted.

And she wrote that since last year the court’s decision that the Constitution does not grant a right to an abortion “is often interpreted to mean that ‘the Supreme Court has ruled that no provision of the Constitution extends any right to reproductive health services.’ “

For her part, Kollar-Ktelly wrote that she “is not sure if that’s the case.”

In response to the WHO, Covid stays a world emergency, however the pandemic might close to its finish in 2023

The Director-General of the World Health Organization (WHO), Dr. Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus, attends an ACANU briefing on global health issues including COVID-19 pandemic and war in Ukraine on December 14, 2022 in Geneva, Switzerland.

Denis Balibouse | Reuters

The World Health Organization said Monday Covid-19 remains a global health emergency as the world enters the fourth year of the pandemic.

But WHO Director-General Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus said he was confident the world would emerge from the emergency phase of the pandemic this year.

“We remain hopeful that in the coming year the world will move into a new phase where we reduce hospital admissions and deaths to the lowest possible levels and where health systems are able to manage Covid-19 in an integrated and sustainable way,” said Tedros said in a statement.

The WHO Emergency Committee met on Friday and told Tedros that the virus, which was originally detected in Wuhan, China, in late 2019, remains a public health emergency of international concern, the UN agency’s highest alert level. The WHO first declared an emergency in January 2020.

CNBC Health & Science

Read CNBC’s latest global health coverage:

The WHO decision comes after the US extended its public health emergency until April earlier this month.

In its statement on Monday, Tedros said the world is in a far better place than it was a year ago when the Omicron variant first swept the globe. The WHO has estimated that at least 90% of the world’s population has some level of immunity to Covid as a result of vaccination or infection.

Weekly Covid deaths have fallen by 70% since the peak of the first massive Omicron wave in February last year, according to WHO data. But deaths picked up again in December as China, the world’s most populous country, faced its biggest wave of infections yet.

Tedros said on Friday surveillance and genetic sequencing have fallen dramatically, making it difficult to track Covid variants and detect new ones. Too few older people are fully vaccinated and many people don’t have access to antivirals, he said.

“Don’t underestimate this virus,” Tedros told reporters at a news conference in Geneva on Friday. “It surprised us and will continue to do so, and it will continue to kill if we don’t do more to provide health tools to people who need them and to comprehensively combat misinformation.”

Last month, the WHO chief said the end of the emergency phase of the pandemic was closer than ever. In the fall, Tedros said the end of the pandemic was in sight.

“We have never been in a better position to end the pandemic. We’re not there yet, but the end is in sight,” Tedros told reporters in Geneva last September.

Republicans declare Trump did not know concerning the three Chinese language spy balloons

After a weekend of loud, incessant, and nonsensical Republican criticism of President Joe Biden for not shooting down the three-school-bus-long Chinese spy balloon when it could have hurt most people, Republicans stutter to explain why Trump at least didn’t know it Three Chinese balloons flew across the United States during the Trump administration.

Florida Republican Representative Mike Waltz was outraged to learn that there had been several incidents of Chinese balloons not being launched in recent years.

At 10:39 am Feb 5, 2023 he tweeted:

“The Office of the Secretary of Defense has informed my office that there have been several incidents involving Chinese balloons in recent years – including over Florida. (see)

Why weren’t they shot down?”

A minute later:

“And according to several Trump administration national security officials, they were never notified of these intrusions by the Pentagon.”

Waltz is a big Trump supporter who voted against impeaching the former president for inciting insurrection, saying, “The president loves this country. He doesn’t want violence.”

This is an obviously false statement, Trump has instigated violence in his own name in hopes of achieving a self coup and Trump loves himself and what power can reach him far more than he loves this country.

In any case, this claim, which Trump never knew, is being peddled in the conservative media.

After US intelligence discovered Chinese spy balloons had flown over the US at least three times during the Trump Fox News wrote, “Trump and his top defense and national security officials told Fox News Digital that it never happened and that they were never briefed on Chinese spy balloons.”

‘It never happened.’ This is a typical claim made by the Trump administration. A more accurate way of phrasing this, if true, would be “We were not aware this happened”. But no, because it’s Trump, it denies the possibility and then immediately moves on to blaming someone else. Nobody told them. It wasn’t her job to know.

It was their job to protect the US, so questions must be asked.

Somehow people over in Trumpland seem to think that makes everything better:

The official told Fox News that “this information was discovered after the [Trump] Leave administration.”

“They went undetected,” the official told Fox News Digital.

The fact that three balloons passed undetected during the Trump administration is not a good defense. At least one of these balloons flew over Florida and Texas.

The claim that this was discovered after the Trump administration left suggests that it’s possible someone on the defense knew about it and chose not to tell top people in the Trump administration.

The question remains: Why didn’t the Trump administration know about these at least three spy balloons?

The good news in the DOD news letter is that “US officials have taken steps to protect themselves from the balloon’s collection of sensitive information and to diminish its intelligence value to the Chinese. The senior defense official said recovering the balloon will allow US analysts to examine sensitive Chinese equipment.”

Now for a pinch of the absolutely insane takes by conservatives:

content/uploads/2023/02/IMG_2578-485×169.jpg” class=”alignnone size-large wp-image-406348″ width=”485″ height=”169″ alt=”” srcset=”https://www. politicususa.com/wp-content/uploads/2023/02/IMG_2578-485×169.jpg 485w, https://www.politicususa.com/wp-content/uploads/2023/02/IMG_2578-200×70.jpg 200w, https: //www.politicususa.com/wp-content/uploads/2023/02/IMG_2578-768×267.jpg 768w, https://www.politicususa.com/wp-content/uploads/2023/02/IMG_2578.jpg 1243w” size=”(max-width: 485px) 100vw, 485px” />

If only Republicans hadn’t tripped over themselves to put things in the backseat they don’t seem to understand even a bit. If they understood how to make rational decisions based on knowledge, they wouldn’t have suggested people launch the balloon or yelled about how it should have been launched before when President Biden actually authorized the launch on Wednesday, but DOD called to wait.

Not only are these people exhaustive in their unbridled hatred and attempt to smear Trump’s failures and incompetence on the Democratic President, but their quick turn to “we didn’t know” for Trump is not the salvation they think.

If it hasn’t already, they will somehow blame President Obama or President Biden for President Trump’s ignorance. just wait There will be an investigation into the Marjorie Taylor Greene variety, there is no need to wait for evidence or facts.

Listen to Sarah on the PoliticusUSA Pod on The Daily’s newsletter podcast here.

Sarah was accredited to report on President Barack Obama, then-Vice President Joe Biden, 2016 Democratic presidential nominee Hillary Clinton, and she exclusively interviewed spokeswoman Nancy Pelosi multiple times and exclusively reported on her first appearance at home after the first impeachment of then President Donald Trump.

Sarah is a two-time Telly Award-winning video producer and a member of the Society of Professional Journalists.

Connect with Sarah on Post, Mastodon @PoliticusSarah@Journa.Host and Twitter.

Grammys 2023: Behold ex-boyfriends Taylor Swift and Harry Types reunite

There is no bad blood in between Taylor Swift And Harry Styles.

Ten years after their split, the “Lavender Haze” singer and the A direction Alum reunited at the 2023 Grammys on February 5. An eyewitness told E! News Taylor walked across the room at the Crypto.com Arena in Los Angeles to greet Harry Steve Lacy‘s appearance and hugged him before a brief conversation. At one point during their conversation, Taylor was seen placing her hand on Harry’s shoulder for support. (See all the celebs on the Grammys red carpet here.)

At the start of the ceremony, Taylor was nominated for four awards while Harry was nominated six times.

And when Harry’s House took home the night’s first trophy for Best Pop Vocal Album, Taylor happily gave the “As It Was” singer a standing ovation. The pop star was also on his feet and dancing as Harry took to the stage to perform his hit single As It Was, according to an eyewitness.

Hong Kong is giving freely half 1,000,000 aircraft tickets to spice up tourism

Hong Kong’s new global advertising campaign will “boost” the city’s reopening to international travelers, the Hong Kong Tourism Board told CNBC’s Squawk Box Asia on Friday.

As part of the “Hello Hong Kong” campaign that started on Thursday, 500,000 flight tickets will be given away over the next six months from March.

The tickets are issued by three Hong Kong airlines – Cathay Pacific, HK Express and Hong Kong Airlines.

The free tickets are part of the HK$2 billion (US$255 million) aid package the government offered to airlines in 2020 at the height of the pandemic.

The Hong Kong Tourism Board is also investing at least HK$100 million to support the initial phase of the campaign, the opening ceremony said.

But Hong Kong still faces a “dilemma” – its infrastructure needs some catching up to accommodate the surge in visitors, said Dane Cheng, executive director of the tourism association.

“I think we actually saw this dilemma from other markets and destinations when they reopened in the last year or so. It’s difficult to catch up…especially for the airlines, the airports and even the hotels,” he told CNBC.

“[But] They want to kickstart and … tell the world in a clear message that Hong Kong and then the mainland — we’ve finally reopened.

This is how the tickets are issued

The ticket giveaway will be phased, starting with Southeast Asian markets, followed by Mainland China and North Asia, and finally other parts of the world.

Around 80,000 tickets have also been reserved for Hong Kong residents, which authorities plan to issue in the summer.

The number of tickets for each region was based on “traffic shares” and pre-pandemic attendance numbers, Cheng said.

Fred Lam, CEO of the Hong Kong Airport Authority, also expects multiplier effects from the free tickets on the number of visitors.

The Asia-Pacific travel industry could fully recover by 2023, according to the World Travel & Tourism Council

“We hope that those who received the tickets will bring 2-3 more friends and family [to Hong Kong]read CNBC’s translations of Lam’s comments at the campaign opening ceremony.

“Although we are only issuing 500,000 airline tickets, we believe it will bring more than 1.5 million tourists arriving,” Lam added. That is about 10% of the total number of visitors expected during the campaign period.

How visitors can get their hands on these free tickets depends on “local market regulations and customs,” he said.

“[That] could include large-scale raffles on a first-come, first-served basis, offering buy-on-get-one free tickets, or through game participation,” Lam said.

“Clearly Reopened”

Hong Kong Finance Minister Paul Chan Mo-po (4th, right) speaks during the announcement of the Hello Hong Kong campaign on February 2, 2023.

Chen Yongnuo | China news service | Getty Images

On Friday, China said cross-border travel with Hong Kong and Macau would fully resume from February 6, scrapping mandatory pre-departure testing and lifting arrival quotas, according to a report by Reuters.

“I think it is very clear that the Hong Kong government and also our mainland central government have been very circumspect and they [made] it is very clear that everything wants to be resumed in an orderly and progressive manner,” said Cheng.

He added that before the pandemic, Hong Kong had “over 25 million overnight guests” each year and it will take the city some time to “get those numbers back”.

Return of MICE events in Hong Kong

Cheng said the past two to three years have been “difficult” for Hong Kong’s MICE (Meetings, Incentives, Conferences & Exhibitions) industry, which attracted more than 1.6 million overseas visitors in 2019 before the pandemic.

“In the last year or so, other countries, cities and destinations have started to open up, and of course we have some wonderful events that have been happening in Hong Kong for years,” Cheng said.

“Anchor Events [were] move out and they apologize: ‘We’re going to other places in Southeast Asia, to the Middle East,’ or some are just postponing or postponing.”

However, he said the city is now “confident” and “looks forward to welcoming visitors again”.

This can be seen in the Hello Hong Kong campaign, which will span more than 250 events and festivals through 2023 – including the Hong Kong Marathon, Clockenflap Music Festival and Hong Kong Rugby Sevens.

In addition, more than 100 international MICE events are planned for the year, the city’s tourism association announced.

Biden plans to finish the well being emergency in Could

U.S. President Joe Biden delivers remarks regarding the coronavirus disease (COVID-19) before receiving a second COVID-19 booster shot in the South Court Auditorium of the Eisenhower Executive Office Building at the White House on March 30, 2022 in Washington, United States.

Kevin Lamarque | Reuters

The Biden administration plans to end the Covid public health emergency this spring as the US moves away from responding to the pandemic as a national crisis and instead treats the virus more like a seasonal respiratory illness.

The White House said in a statement Monday it will end public health and national emergencies on May 11, which the Trump administration first declared in 2020.

The statement, issued by the Office of Management and Budget, expressed the White House’s strong opposition to House Republican legislation aimed at immediately ending emergency declarations.

Public health and national emergencies have allowed hospitals and other healthcare providers to respond more flexibly when faced with spikes in patient traffic during Covid outbreaks.

Enrollment in Medicaid has also surged because Congress basically barred states from withdrawing people from the program, citing the public health emergency.

A provision in federal spending legislation passed in December allows states to begin withdrawing people from Medicaid in April.

Although the emergency declarations will remain in effect through the spring, the federal response to the pandemic has already been scaled back as funding has dried up. Congress failed for months to pass a White House request for $22.5 billion in additional funding for the Covid response.

The Department of Health has promised to give states 60 days’ notice before the emergency ends, giving the health care system time to prepare for a return to normal.

The public health emergency has been extended every 90 days since January 2020 as the virus has evolved into new variants and repeatedly thrown curveballs over the past three years. HHS extended the emergency earlier this month.

The OMB said an abrupt end to emergencies in the manner established by Republican legislation would “create widespread chaos and uncertainty throughout the health care system.”

Ending the statements without giving hospitals time to adjust would result in “disruptions in care and delays in payments, and many facilities across the country will experience lost revenue,” according to the OMB statement.

It would also “sow confusion and chaos” in the process of processing Medicaid coverage, OMB said.

The White House also plans to bring the Covid vaccines to the private market in the near future, although the exact timing is unclear. That means the cost of the vaccines would be borne by patients’ insurance policies, not the federal government.

Moderna and Pfizer have both announced they can charge up to $130 per vaccine dose, four times what the federal government pays.

Covid has killed more than 1 million people in the US since 2020. Deaths have fallen dramatically since the pandemic peaked in winter 2021, but nearly 4,000 people still succumb to the virus each week.

US navy shoots down suspected Chinese language surveillance balloon

A balloon flies in the sky over Billings, Montana, U.S., February 1, 2023, in this social media image.

Chase Doak via Reuters

The US military shot down a suspected Chinese surveillance balloon that had been flying over the country for several days on Saturday.

In a statement Saturday, Secretary of Defense Lloyd Austin said a US fighter jet assigned to US Northern Command successfully downed the balloon on orders from President Joe Biden. Lloyd said the balloon would be used by the People’s Republic of China “to attempt to patrol strategic locations in the continental United States.”

Biden gave approval on Wednesday to dismantle the balloon as soon as it can do so “without undue risk to American lives beneath the balloon’s path,” Lloyd said.

“In accordance with the President’s instructions, the Department of Defense has developed options to safely dismantle the balloon over our territorial waters while closely monitoring its trajectory and intelligence gathering activities,” he said in the statement.

A jet flies past a suspected Chinese spy balloon hovering offshore in Surfside Beach, South Carolina, on February 4, 2023.

Randall Hill | Reuters

Television footage shows the high-altitude balloon, estimated to be the size of three school buses, bursting in a small explosion before falling into the water. Officials will attempt to salvage the debris, according to NBC News.

The Federal Aviation Administration issued a ground stop in parts of North Carolina and South Carolina Saturday afternoon and closed additional airspace. Departures were suspended “to assist the Department of Defense in national security efforts,” a representative told CNBC. Normal operations resumed later in the afternoon, the FAA said on Twitter.

Biden broke his silence on the balloon for the first time on Saturday, telling a group of reporters, “We’ll take care of it.” Later that afternoon, he told reporters that he instructed officers to “shoot it down” on Wednesday, however that they wanted to wait until it was as safe as possible.

“They successfully mined it, and I want to add to our airmen who did it,” Biden said. “And we’ll have more to say about that a little later.”

The suspected Chinese spy balloon drifts to the ocean after being shot down off the coast of Surfside Beach, South Carolina, USA, on February 4, 2023.

Randall Hill | Reuters

The balloon was first sighted over Billings, Montana on Wednesday. Defense officials said the Pentagon was considering shooting down the balloon earlier this week but decided against it after a briefing from Biden. The decision was made in consultation with senior officials including Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff General Mark Milley and Secretary of Defense Lloyd Austin.

Biden concluded that the US would not launch the balloon because debris from it could cause damage to the ground, a Pentagon official said. In addition, any information the balloon gathers would have “limited value” compared to China’s spy satellites.

China’s Foreign Ministry said on Friday that the balloon, a civilian weather airship intended for scientific research, had gone off course. She described the incident as a result of “force majeure” for which she was not responsible.

This claim was dismissed out of hand by US officials. A senior Pentagon official told reporters Thursday night that the object was clearly a surveillance balloon flying over sensitive locations to gather information.

“We have noted the PRC’s statement of regret, but the presence of this balloon in our airspace is a clear violation of our sovereignty as well as international law and it is unacceptable that this has happened,” the official said.

U.S. President Joe Biden gestures to reporters before boarding Air Force One en route to Camp David at Hancock Field Air National Guard Base in Syracuse, New York, on February 4, 2023.

Elisabeth Franz | Reuters

The balloon’s presence prompted US Secretary of State Antony Blinken to indefinitely postpone an already tense trip to China on Friday.

The visit should strengthen communication and cooperation between the two countries as tensions have deepened over China’s increasing military aggression against Taiwan and closer alliances with Russian President Vladimir Putin.

Instead, Blinken told China’s Central Foreign Ministry director Wang Yi in a phone call Friday that the balloon was an “irresponsible act and a clear violation of US sovereignty and international law that undermines the purpose of the trip,” according to a reading the discussion.

– CNBC’s Christina Wilkie and Amanda Macias contributed to this report

E-40 donates $100,000 to Grambling State College’s music division

Bay Area legend E-40 recently made a hefty donation to his alma mater, Grambling State University (GSU)! Specifically, E-40 wrote Louisiana HBCU a check for $100,000 that will benefit the music department.

The institution renamed their recording studio after The Rapper

The news came Friday as E-40 stopped by the institution he was attending at the time to attend the annual Prez Says event.

During a visit to the campus, E-40 presented the institution with a check for $100,000. The “Tell Me When To Go” rapper was joined by his wife, as well as GSU President Richard Gallot and Dr. Nikole Roebuck, music department chair and leader of Grambling’s bands.

GSU recognized E-40’s donation with an Instagram post. This upload specifically noted that the recording studio at Grambling’s Performing Arts Center would be renamed “Earl ‘E-40’ Stevens Recording Studio”.

“We had a very special guest who returned to campus for Prez Says and presented a special donation to the university. @e40 and @dr.nikkiroe joined forces to make this special moment a reality, renaming the recording studio at the Performing Arts Center the Earl “E-40″ Stevens Recording Studio”.

At the very end of the caption, it warmly reads, “It was a pleasure to have you back on campus and we appreciate the impact your gift will have on our students.”

E-40 joins the growing list of stars who have donated to HBCUs

E-40 definitely nailed it with his donation, and he’s one of the many stars who have been paying back to HBCUs lately!

Just last month, Spike Lee unveiled a scholarship program for HBCU students in Atlanta, The Shade Room previously reported.

In addition, Missy Elliott donated $20,000 to Norfolk State University back in December before receiving an honorary doctorate from the institution.

Charlamagne also contributed to the fundraising when he established a scholarship fund at South Carolina State University by providing a $250,000 donation. Remarkably, it was named The Ford Family Endowed Scholarship Fund in honor of his mother and grandma, and benefits women majoring in English or communications as well as those studying to become a mental health professional.

Shoutout to E-40 for coming and supporting Grambling State University!