Joe Biden Takes Another Crack At The Presidency, Announces His Bid For 2024 Reelection

Joe Biden Takes Another Crack At The Presidency, Announces His Bid For 2024 Reelection


The war is on for the seat in the Oval Office, and it looks like President Joe Biden wants to “finish the job.”

In an emotional video posted on Twitter, the 46th President of the United States officially announced that he is running for reelection in 2024.

In the video, Biden highlighted some of the trauma and turmoil that the country has faced since he took office, tackling the war on critical race theory, book bans, voting rights and abortion and LGBTQ+ rights. “Personal freedom is Fundamental to who we are as Americans,” Biden said. “That’s been the work of my first term – to fight for our democracy.”

WASHINGTON, DC February 10, 2023:
US President Joe Biden and Vice President Kamala Harris during the National Governors Association Winter Meeting in the East Room of the White House on Friday, February 10, 2023.
(Photo by Demetrius Freeman/The Washington Post via Getty Images)

 

Announced on the anniversary of when Biden announced his initial campaign in 2019, according to the Associated Press, running for another four-year bid and winning would make Biden the oldest sitting President – as he will be 86 in 2028. However, working in the political field for more than 50 years brings the knowledge needed to continue to lead the country. Biden and his running mate, America’s first Black woman Vice President, Kamala Harris, are in for a fight as the Republican Party has been working hard to line up their presidential candidates, including former President Donald Trump, conservative radio host Larry Elder, and potentially, South Carolina Sen. Tim Scott.

While the Democratic candidate is not letting age be a factor in his pursuit, some critics are weary about how passionately he will be able to hit the campaign trail. The Hill reported he didn’t inspire an enormous amount of passion in the 2020 primaries, which is concerning for certain age demographics. Many Americans under the age of 30 were against the idea of Biden running for a second term – dropping from 45% to 36%.

Former Boston Celtics Head Coach Ime Udoka Is Now #TeamHoustonRockets


Last week, reports surfaced that the Toronto Raptors were in talks with former Boston Celtics head coach Ime Udoka about taking on the lead coaching position. However, less than a week later, the Houston Rockets appear to have beaten the Canadian basketball team to the punch.

According to the Associated Press, the Rockets have hired Udoka to join the two-time championship team. A source allegedly leaked the news to the media outlet under the condition of anonymity, because the official announcement has yet to be released. 

Several reports and sports critics have rated the Houston Rockets as one of the lowest-ranking teams in the NBA, with one of the worst records in the last two NBA seasons. Due to the less-than-stellar record of the team, the Rockets franchise decided to terminate former head coach Stephen Silas after just three seasons.

BOSTON, MA – JUNE 16: Ime Udoka talks to the media after the game against the Golden State Warriors during Game Six of the 2022 NBA Finals on June 16, 2022 (Photo by Annette Grant/NBAE via Getty Images)

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The news comes amid the Rockets announcing plans to build the team around their young roster of players, including Jalen Green and Jabari Smith. The Associated Press also reported that earlier this month, Rafael Stone, general manager of the Houston Rockets, stated he intended to pursue veteran free agents to add to the team’s roster and try to turn things around.

After only one season as head coach with the Boston Celtics, Udoka became a hot commodity when he led the team to the NBA Finals against the Golden State Warriors. However, Udoka’s coaching career was soon derailed when he was fired for allegedly having an intimate but consensual relationship with a female staffer. In February, Joe Mazzulla was named the team’s new head coach for the Celtics, officially replacing Udoka.  

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Stacey Bledsoe Is Passionate About Clinical Research Diversity And Better Health Equity And Outcomes For Black Patients


Stacey Bledsoe joined Gilead Sciences in 2022 to serve as the biopharmaceutical company’s first Head of Global Clinical Trial Diversity and Inclusion. As a registered nurse with more than two decades of experience in the pharmaceutical industry, she saw a unique opportunity to fulfill a personal and professional obligation to improve representation in clinical studies that evaluate the safety and efficacy of new medications and protocols.

“My father was diagnosed with lung cancer in 2016,” Bledsoe explains.

“I asked his caregivers whether any trials were open to him and was told there were none. That didn’t sit well with me. I started thinking about Black people’s experiences and what we in the healthcare industry were doing in this space. Didn’t we have a responsibility to ensure everyone has access to innovative drugs and treatments that can save lives?”

Black people have been largely left out of clinical research due to centuries of past and present systemic medical mistreatment, directly leading to community distrust of the healthcare system. Another fundamental barrier has been the industry itself.

Historically, clinical trials in the United States have almost exclusively focused on middle-aged white males,” Bledsoe told BLACK ENTERPRISE.

“The industry didn’t start focusing on women at all until 1993 – Black women and minorities followed that.” The result is that decades of established treatment protocolsmany of which are currently standard useare based on data culled from a single, narrow patient demographic.

Bledsoe points to FDA data finding 20% of drugs approved for use in the U.S. produce different reactions in patients based on the individual’s race or ethnicity.

“If we aren’t part of clinical trials, then we don’t have this information until after these drugs go on the market,” she says, noting that differences in gender, age, family history, as well as socio-economic determinants, all factor into the risk/benefit equation when evaluating a course of treatment.

Bledsoe believes the critical lack of data is at least partially responsible for shocking health disparities and poor disease outcomes among African Americans.

“Black women are 41% more likely to die of breast cancer than our white counterparts, yet we account for only 10-15% percent of participants in clinical trials for cancer treatments. Diversifying clinical trials will help us better understand how different treatments affect the populations that can benefit most,” Bledsoe shared.  

“Representation in clinical trials not only matters, it saves lives,” 

Amid National Minority Health Month, Bledsoe took the opportunity to discuss the necessity of Black participation in clinical trials and Gilead’s efforts to eliminate the barriers that have manifested both in the community and the healthcare industry.

She explains: “We are focused on a strategy with three main components: patients, providers, and partners.” Specifically, the company is conducting community outreach to educate patients about the importance of clinical trials and empower them to advocate for participation with their doctors. On the provider front, Gilead challenges the misconception that communities of color are “hard to reach.”

The goal is to locate clinical trial sites accessible to people of color and where trial investigators are racially diverse. The final piece of the puzzle is partnerships.

“We know we can’t do this work alone. Gilead enters partnerships and collaborations with trusted intermediaries in the community that address diversity in clinical trials and help equity as a whole.

For example, Bledsoe cited Gilead’s recent Black History Month collaboration with Black Health Matters, a nonprofit which kicked off an educational campaign raising awareness of Gilead’s clinical trials for triple-negative breast cancer. The company also partnered with Highland Hospital in Oakland, California, to support a new cancer clinical trial center to make cancer care accessible to the area’s predominantly Black community.

On the policy front, Gilead is working toward implementing new guidance from the FDA that will require biopharmaceutical companies to enroll more participants from underrepresented populations into clinical trials.

While Gilead, energized by Bledsoe’s drive and leadership, is making strides in diversifying clinical research, change is also coming across the industry. Pharmaceutical companies were spurred to act on this front by the healthcare inequities exposed by the COVID-19 pandemic and the federal government’s subsequent demand for increased accountability from the industry.

“These events started the fire,” Bledsoe told BE.

“New FDA guidelines require companies to have a diversity plan for every Phase 3 clinical study, and in that plan, you must have enrollment goals for recruiting diverse patients.”

Bledsoe feels her efforts at Gilead have the advantage of the company’s supportive leadership and a larger culture that values diversity. As part of growing that culture and creating a healthier world for all people, the company is also actively involved at the community level. Gilead is ontheground investing in education, partnerships, and innovative sciences so that historically marginalized and disinvested communities have fair and just opportunities to achieve their best health.

Bledsoe explained, “I came to Gilead because of its history of putting the patient first. The company has achieved this with HIV, with hepatitis, and that level of support continues with oncology. At Gilead, we are committed to increasing diversity in clinical trials and advancing global health and Black equity overall.”

The bottom line is that science is better when everyone has a seat at the table, and improving the diversity of clinical trials requires enabling communities to contribute to the research and development process.

For assistance in finding a clinical trial, Gilead has created an easy-to-use search tool, which can be found here.

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Fat Joe Recruits Busta Rhymes, French Montana, Rick Ross to Give ‘Power to the Patients’ for D.C. Concert


Fat Joe wants to give Power to the Patients when he enlisted Busta Rhymes, Rick Ross and French Montana to join him in a concert that will take place in Washington, D.C.

According to TMZ Hip Hop, Fat Joe, who is working in partnership with the non-profit group, Power to the Patients is heading a concert with the aforementioned artists to bring attention to discrepancies in hospital charges.

UN Human Rights Experts Kick Off US Tour Focused on Racial Justice and Policing

UN Human Rights Experts Kick Off US Tour Focused on Racial Justice and Policing


A group of human rights experts with the United Nations arrived in the U.S. to begin a six-city tour focused on exploring racial justice, law enforcement, and policing issues in the country.

On Monday, the Expert Mechanism to Advance Racial Justice and Equality in the Context of Law Enforcement kicked off its two-week visit to the U.S., The Guardian reported. The group is set to visit Washington, D.C., Atlanta, Los Angeles, Chicago, Minneapolis, and New York City.

The independent panel, appointed by the UN human rights council, was established in response to the international outcry following the killing of George Floyd in 2020 by a white police officer.

The UN said the trip was organized to help “further transformative change for racial justice and equality in the context of law enforcement for Africans and people of African descent.”

The team of experts will meet with government officials at federal, state, and local levels, and visit law enforcement authorities, civil society organizations, and detention centers. They’ll also review existing laws and practices surrounding the use of force by law enforcement officials and examine how aligned they are with international human rights standards.

“We look forward to gaining first-hand insight about the lived experiences of people of African descent in the United States,” panel member Juan Méndez said.

“And to offer recommendations to the government at all levels, to support efforts in combating systemic racism and excessive use of force, and ensure accountability and justice.”

Activists across the country have been applauding the UN tour and are hopeful for the results it might produce.

“Extrajudicial killings have become increasingly routine in American policing,” Collette Flanagan, the founder of Mothers Against Police Brutality said. Flanagan’s son Clinton Allen was killed by police in Dallas in 2013.

“They happen literally every day. This deadly police brutality represents a massive human rights violation that falls most heavily on people of African descent.”

“We welcome the Expert Mechanism to Atlanta in the name of our martyred children,” she continued. “We hope this visit will help us move our country to live up to its obligations under the Universal Declaration of Human Rights and other international human rights agreements.”

Teyana Taylor Felt Pharrell ‘Fed Her To The Wolves’ When She Was Signed To His Label


As a young teenager, Teyana Taylor signed a recording contract with Pharrell Williams’s Star Trak Entertainment record label before she was introduced on MTV’s My Super Sweet 16.

In a recent interview with the Angie Martinez IRL Podcast, the singer shared her thoughts about being on Star Trek Entertainment when she was only 15 years old. Taylor said she was new to the industry and needed guidance then, and felt Pharrell should have stood up and fought more on her behalf. 

“For me, that 15-year-old, that girl just needed you to fight a little harder. You know what I’m saying? Needed you to maybe push even if you didn’t have the strength to,” she told Martinez.

“I just needed you to push for me more.”

The mom of two also revealed that during her time as Pharrell’s artist, she didn’t feel protected, and felt like the music producer fed her “to the wolves.”

The Harlem native alluded to Pharrell’s laidback persona, describing him as one of the “easiest people in the whole wide world.” Yet, when people started coming around and mishandling her and “started going into the cookie jar,” she said he did not protect her.

“To me, as a 15-year-old, it was, you didn’t protect me. You let everyone mishandle me. I’m signed to you, and you let everybody get in the way, and everybody break us apart. You didn’t protect me.”

However, the 32-year-old remains grateful to Pharrell for helping to jumpstart her career

“I be basking in my blessings, and I will have moments when I just think, damn, no matter how I felt when I was younger, none of these doors would have ever opened for me if it wasn’t for P,” she said.

You can view the interview in its entirety below:

Taylor has come along way from being a vulnerable teenager. Since being signed to Star Trak, she’s gone on to produce good music as an artist signed to Good Music, the label started by the artist formerly known as Kanye West. Fans sang their praises for Taylor’s performances on her Last Rose Petal Farewell Tour. The multitalented entertainer has also acted in a number of films; the most recent A Thousand and One was released in theaters March 31.

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Rapper Polo G’s Mom Didn’t Make Her Kids Work Hard For The Money And Here’s Why


As a mom, manager and entrepreneur, Stacia Mac is proud to have risen from poverty so her kids didn’t have to work hard for the bag.

The ‘momager’ of Chicago-bred rapper Polo G recently appeared in a clip on The Neighborhood Talk’s Instagram, where she disclosed one of her parenting philosophies to the world, causing social media to go into a frenzy.

In the interview, Mac was asked about allowing her kids to work “regular jobs.” The mother of four began echoing her longtime desire to have her kids “approach the world without a lack mindset,” so she did everything she could to provide. She worked in residential and commercial property management before taking up her manager role.

Mac recalled the times when she experienced financial hardships despite being gainfully employed. Undeterred, she recognized the value of showing her kids and their dreams love.

“We are hardwired to think that in order to be successful, we got to go through some sh-,” Mac explained in the video, later clarifying in the comment section that her children of “independent thinkers and beings” did indeed work “regular jobs by choice.”

She added: “I wanted my children to follow their dreams and not become cogs in someone else’s wheel. To know that the possibilities for their future were limitless!”

Chart-topping hip-hop artist Polo G scored three top 10 albums and a Hot 100 No. 1 in two years after taking a chance on his dreams. With the support of his mama, who makes it her business to be a mom and supporter, the “Pop Out” lyricist has gained widespread success.

Last year, Polo G was tapped to perform at a Twitch Livestream event in New York to commemorate its first-ever metaverse capsule in partnership with Epic Games and Fortnite. Polo G said his participation fulfilled one of his lifelong dreams of working with the popular clothing brand.

“It’s always been my dream to collaborate with them considering my rap name is inspired by the brand,” Polo G said, per People Magazine.

Additionally, Mac has previously expressed her pride for two other children–Trench Baby and Leilani– who have also entered the music industry and written their own music.

Later, Mac revealed her disappointment in Black households who condone kicking their kids out at 18 as opposed to white households who allow their kids to “live” or “yacht.” But Mac strived differently for her family.

“They have also received my support in all they’ve decided to explore. I am their biggest champion, supporter and umbrella. So many more of our children would be further in life if they received the same love,” Mac wrote via Instagram.

Mixed Instagram comments flooded the conversation about Mac’s parenting and whether or not they agreed.

“Love this! Unfortunately many households put burdens on children robbing them of their childhood years they’ll never get back,” a user commented.

 

“Its pure ignorance when people equate having a regular job to struggling. Growing up is inevitable which means you will need to provide for yourself unless you have generational wealth & you often still need to work then,” one user disagreed.

What are your thoughts on parents supporting children financially? Should teenagers and adult children earn their own keep? Do you agree with Polo G’s mom? Sound off in the comments.

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The Luther Vandross Foundation Continues The Educational Philanthropy of Acclaimed Singer Luther Vandross with Inaugural Luncheon


The Luther Vandross Foundation, with support from Waterford, Primary Wave Music and the Luther Vandross Estate, celebrated the educational philanthropy of Luther Vandross this past Saturday with an inaugural luncheon in Philadelphia. Friends, family, and supporters gathered at the Historic Belmont Mansion in West Fairmount Park to celebrate not only Luther’s life, but his legacy of supporting students and Historically Black Colleges and Universities (HBCUs).

Guests arrived at 1pm to the sounds of Luther’s music playing throughout the venue. A Waterford Master Craftsman was on hand crafting custom cuts within the crystal of a unique decanter which will be auctioned off at a future date to benefit Luther’s Foundation before everyone moved into the main tent. The day included remarks from the Foundation’s Brenda Shields and Sheila Cook, as well as the Estate’s Fonzi Thornton.

L-R: Mark Fleming (PR & Partnerhips, Waterford), David Gottlieb (Manager, Luther Vandross Estate), Brenda Shields (President, Luther Vandross Foundation & Board Member, Luther Vandross Estate), Alice Bastin (Creative Director, Waterford), Sheila Cook (Treasurer, Luther Vandross Foundation), Fonzi Thornton (Board Member, Luther Vandross Estate),
Adam Hemming (VP of Marketing, Waterford)
Courtesy Luther Vandross Foundation

Waterford’s Creative Director, Alice Bastin, also spoke and commented saying “music is an emotional thread that will be integral to our new brand narrative at Waterford. Luther’s music has inspired and bonded generations and his legacy lives on through the important work the Luther Vandross Foundation does. It’s incredibly important to me that Waterford supports the work of the Luther Vandross Foundation and promotes cultural conversations around diversity and inclusivity. It is an honor for Waterford to be able to contribute to the important work of the Luther Vandross Foundation and to give talented students attending HBCU’s the financial aid to further their passions in education.”

Having always been a strong advocate and champion of education, Luther left a portion of his estate to HBCUs. His mother continued to support Luther’s passion and over $1 Million in scholarships have been awarded. In 2021, the Luther Vandross Foundation was established with the intent to continue Luther’s legacy of providing financial aid to students, and to heighten awareness and the importance of the Historically Black Colleges and Universities in the U.S. In the last year the Foundation alone, has awarded $250,000 in scholarships.

Plans for next year’s event are already in the works. This year’s event was just the first of many to come, helping to carry on Luther’s incredible support of education, students and the HBCUs.

Susan Rice Stepping Down As Biden’s Domestic Policy Chief

Susan Rice Stepping Down As Biden’s Domestic Policy Chief


According to NBC News, President Biden’s Domestic Policy Chief, Susan Rice, is stepping down from her position in May. Rice has spent the last two years overseeing the president’s domestic agenda. During her tenure, Biden has signed executive and legislative actions on issues ranging from healthcare to gun safety and student loans. “It is extraordinary when you think about what she’s done in terms of public service across her career, capped off by being the first person ever to be the national security adviser and domestic policy adviser,” said White House Chief of Staff Jeff Zients, who has known Rice since high school.

Rice served as former President Obama’s national security adviser and was also on Biden’s shortlist for potential vice presidential candidates in 2020. When entering her role as domestic policy chief, she faced criticism, having primarily worked in foreign affairs for both the Obama and Clinton administrations; however, her work has been praised by Democratic leaders. “Susan was there during this two-year period where there was just an incredible and historic burst of policymaking, and the next year and a half is going to be different. It’s going to call for a different approach to policy,” said Brian Deese, who worked with Rice as director of the National Economic Council.

 

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A post shared by Susan Rice (@ambsusanrice)


Though her departure may seem sudden, Rice told colleagues that she never intended to stay with the administration for longer than two years, according to NBC News. In fact, the timing of Rice’s departure was only delayed to help solidify several projects she’d been overseeing, including an anti-semitism strategy and a federal response to recidivism for formerly incarcerated people. With these focuses, it seems that the ambassador is ending her time in the White House the way she began it: confronting hard-hitting and, sometimes, controversial issues with policy changes that support the needs of the American people.

WASHINGTON, DC – AUGUST 24: White House Domestic Policy Adviser Susan Rice (R) speaks on President Biden’s announcement of student loan debt forgiveness (Photo by Alex Wong/Getty Images)

Something President Biden says no one does better than Rice. “I surprised a lot of people when I named Ambassador Susan Rice as my Domestic Policy Advisor,” the president said in a statement. He continued, “But what I knew then and what we all know now – after more than two years of her steady leadership of the Domestic Policy Council – it’s clear: there is no one more capable, and more determined to get important things done for the American people than Susan Rice.”

Rice’s last day in the White House will be May 26.

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