Damar Hamlin asked who won Bills-Bengals when he woke up

ORCHARD PARK, N.Y. (AP) — Buffalo Bills safety Damar Hamlin has begun to communicate in writing with his family and others who have been at his bedside since he went into cardiac arrest three days ago — and his first question was, “Did we win?” his doctors said Thursday.

“The answer is yes, Damar, you won. You’ve won the game of life.” Dr. Timothy Pritts told reporters in a conference call from the University of Cincinnati Medical Center, where Hamlin was rushed after collapsing and being resuscitated on the field during the Bills’ game against the Bengals on Monday night.

Hamlin remains critically ill and in the hospital’s intensive care unit, but he began to wake up Wednesday night, and it appears his neurological function is intact, meaning he can follow commands and move, Pritts said.

“He still has significant progress he needs to make, but this marks a really good turning point in his ongoing care,” the doctor said.

“His first question that he wrote when he started to awaken was, ’Did we win?′” Pritts said. “So we know that it’s not only that the lights are on. We know that he’s home. And it appears that all the cylinders are firing within his brain, which is greatly gratifying for all of us.”

Dr. William Knight IV said doctors had not yet determined the cause of Hamlin’s cardiac arrest and that testing is ongoing.

It’s also too early to say whether Hamlin could return to football after undergoing rehabilitation, Knight said.

The developments came as the Bills returned to practice on Thursday for the first time since Hamlin collapsed when his heart stopped after making a tackle during the game’s first quarter.

The game was suspended and will not be resumed, two people familiar with the decision told The Associated Press. Both people spoke to the AP on condition of anonymity because the league is still figuring out how to determine playoff seedings and scheduling. The NFL Players Association must approve changes.

Hamlin, a second-year player from the Pittsburgh area, spent the past two days sedated and listed in critical condition.

Pritts said during the conference call that neurological signs of improvement began Wednesday night as Hamlin gradually woke up, with the rest of his body healing. Hamlin still cannot speak because of a breathing tube in his throat.

Knight credited the quick medical response with saving Hamlin’s life.

He said a physician was by Hamlin’s side within a minute of him collapsing and recognized that the defensive back did not have a pulse. Knight said Hamlin required CPR and resuscitation on the field.

“It’s been a long and difficult road for the last three days … he has made a pretty remarkable improvement,” Knight said.

“Great news,” President Joe Biden said in a tweet. “Damar, like I told your mom and dad yesterday, Jill and I – along with all of America – are praying for you and your family.”

Along with being able to write, his doctors said Hamlin was able to hold the hands of family and members of the Bills’ administrative and medical teams at his bedside.

Although Hamlin is following commands, doctors have not yet fully assessed his speech and other functions, in part because he is under sedation to accommodate the breathing tube.

“When we talk about neurologically intact, it’s a very gross term of big motor movements and following commands. When we talk about the finer things that make us human — cognition, emotion, speech, language, etc., we’re looking forward to learning more about that,” Knight said.

Over the past few days, players across the league — both former teammates and those who didn’t know Hamlin until Monday — have rallied in support.

Colts safety Rodney Thomas made the two-hour drive from Indianapolis to Cincinnati on Tuesday just to be by the side of his former high school teammate.

“He’s a fighter. I know he’s a fighter and there’s no other thought in my mind other than him walking out under his own power,” Thomas said Wednesday.

Minnesota Vikings defensive tackle Harrison Phillips, who spent the previous four seasons playing for Buffalo, had dinner delivered to the hospital for Hamlin’s family and medical staff.

Fans, team owners and players — including Tom Brady and Russell Wilson — have made donations to Hamlin’s Chasing M’s Foundation, which had raised more than $7.5 million by Thursday evening.

___

AP Pro Football Writer Teresa M. Walker in Nashville contributed to this report. Thompson reported from Buffalo.

___

AP NFL: https://apnews.com/hub/nfl and https://twitter.com/AP_NFL


source

How Jobs Data Could Define Market's Next Move: Live Insight & Analysis

Amazon announces jobs cuts on the eve of Friday’s jobs reports. Catch the stories driving stocks and the broader economy live at 9:30 a.m. ET.

Watch TheStreet’s Market Open:

More on Today’s Top Stories:

  • TheStreet is live every weekday at 9:30 a.m. ET. Join us for the latest market commentary, insight and analysis here.

    source

    [World] Widespread damage to California coast in wake of major storms

    BBC News world-us_and_canada 

    This video can not be played

    To play this video you need to enable JavaScript in your browser.

    Media caption,

    Watch: California hit with record-breaking rain and flooding

    A deadly storm has inflicted widespread damage in northern California dumping record-breaking rain and snow along the coastline.

    Huge waves washed away walls of homes, while mudslides, sinkholes and flooding were reported throughout the region.

    Two deaths were reported on Thursday. A toddler died after a tree fell on his home, and a 19-year old woman died when she crashed her car due to wet roads.

    The forecast is for more ominous weather for the weekend and next week.

    As of Friday morning, over 97,000 homes and businesses were without power after hurricane-force winds knocked over large trees and downed power cables.

    Neighbourhoods of San Francisco are still recovering from flooding, while weather forecasters say more wet and windy weather is coming to the area.

    The rain has fallen on areas that were already saturated from a New Year’s Eve storm.

    Image source, Cambria Fire Department

    Image caption,

    A wave crashed through a window, hitting one person

    One resident of the seaside community of Cambria in San Luis Obispo County was struck by “an extremely large rogue wave” inside their home on Thursday morning.

    “The homes waterfront windows were shattered and the resident was knocked over by the powerful wave,” said the Cambria Fire Department, adding that “the water damage extended throughout the home”.

    Homes were also damaged in Monterey County, and in Humboldt County where officials in the town of Shelter Cove were warning that the waves “can easily wash people and pets into the ocean”.

    Parts of the Capitola pier in Santa Cruz County collapsed under 35-foot (10.6 meters) waves.

    Image source, Santa Cruz County

    Image caption,

    Piers were damaged along the coast, including this one in the popular community of Capitola

    Tony Valdez, who has lived in Santa Cruz for 28 years, said seeing the damage to the pier left him with a feeling of “disbelief”.

    “I mean, it had to take a huge hit for that damage,” he told CBS News, the BBC’s partner in the US. “That’s why you have to have a lot of respect for the ocean and the water out there.”

    Capitola restaurant owner Joshua Kochanek said waves hit his business roughly every 10 minutes.

    “The waves were coming in and all the damage. It was gnarly. It kept you on your feet,” he said.

    This video can not be played

    To play this video you need to enable JavaScript in your browser.

    Media caption,

    Forecaster Louise Lear looks at the storms still heading for the west coast

    Emergency shelters have been opened for residents who have been told to evacuate their homes due to fears of flooding and landslides on hillsides that have been scarred by recent forest fires.

    Beaches have also been ordered to close along the coast.

    Further inland, the Sierra Nevada mountains have accumulated over one foot of heavy snow, and more is expected.

    The mountains are expected to receive up to three additional feet of snow in the coming days, according to the National Weather Service.

    A “stronger” atmospheric river is expected to arrive Monday and persist into Tuesday, bringing more precipitation and gusty winds.

     

    Read More 

     

    Cathie Wood Watch: Ark Buys Coinbase Amid Crypto Woes

    Famed money manager Cathie Wood has bought a slew of Coinbase  (COIN) – Get Free Report shares in recent months, trying to take advantage of their decline.

    Coinbase is the largest U.S. cryptocurrency exchange and has suffered from weakness in the crypto market over the past year, including a plunge by bitcoin. Coinbase stock has dived 86% in the past 12 months.

    Wood, chief executive at Ark Investment Management, again purchased Coinbase shares Jan. 5. Ark funds snagged 172,276 shares, valued at $5.8 million as of that day’s close.


    source

    Peloton fined $19 million for unsafe treadmills


    New York
    CNN
     — 

    Peloton has agreed to pay a $19 million fine for failing to promptly report treadmill hazards and for distributing recalled treadmills, the Consumer Products Safety Commission said Thursday.

    The fine resolves charges that the company had “knowingly failed to immediately report” to the US regulator defects with its Tread+ treadmill, it said in a statement. The civil penalty also settles charges that Peloton distributed recalled treadmills in violation of the Consumer Product Safety Act.

    The commission said it had levied “one of the largest civil penalties in our history” due, in part, to the company “distributing recalled products with a lethal defect.” In May 2021, Peloton recalled about 125,000 of its Tread+ brand treadmills following the death of a 6-year-old child and dozens of other reports of injuries related to its machines.

    But it had initially declined to do so despite an “urgent request” by CPSC in April. Such declines are extremely rare.

    In May, then CEO John Foley said Peloton “made a mistake in our initial response to the CPSC’s request. We should’ve engage more productively with them from the outset. For that I apologize.”

    The fine, according to the commission, reflected that initial refusal. Peloton had received reports of “entrapment” by its Tread+ treadmills as early as 2018, it said.

    “By the time Peloton filed a report with the Commission there were more than 150 reports of people, pets, and/or objects being pulled under the rear of the Tread+ treadmill,” according to the commission.

    Peloton did not immediately respond to CNN’s request for comment.

    The exercise equipment company, which had phenomenal sales growth during the height of the pandemic, has faced a myriad of problems since. The company has reacted with management changes and large staff and operations cuts.

    Shares of Peloton Interactive Inc

    (PTON)
    have crashed, falling from a high of about $167 in January 2021 to about $8 in after-hours trading following the CPSC announcement.

    Chris Isidore and Jordan Valinsky also contributed to this story.

    source

    McCarthy picks up another vote for speaker in 13th round but falls short again

    Latest & Breaking News on Fox News 

    Kevin McCarthy picked up another vote for House speaker on Friday during the 13th round of voting, but still fell just a few votes short of capturing a majority.

    Rep.-elect Andy Harris of Maryland switched his vote to McCarthy, the 15th vote change seen in the two votes held Friday.

    That switch gave McCarthy 214 votes, and while that was not quite enough for a majority, it showed that members continue to break for the GOP leader a day after he made a series of concessions to members of the House Freedom Caucus. The incoming Democratic leader, Rep.-elect Hakeem Jeffries of New York, received 212 votes.

    HOUSE SPEAKER BREAKTHROUGH: MCCARTHY PICKS UP 14 GOP VOTES IN 12TH ROUND OF VOTING

    In the prior vote held on Friday, McCarthy picked up the votes of 14 members who had either been voting against him or were voting “present.”

    The momentum seen Friday for McCarthy sparked optimism that he can soon win a House majority, although several members say it might still take days to solidify the win.

    THE VOTE FOR HOUSE SPEAKER: LIVE UPDATES

    The six remaining GOP holdouts are a significant obstacle, as most of that group has said they will never vote for McCarthy. The remaining GOP holdouts are Reps.-elect Andy Biggs of Arizona, Lauren Boebert of Colorado, Elijah Crane of Arizona, Matt Gaetz of Florida, Bob Good of Virginia and Matt Rosendale of Montana.

    In the 13th round of voting each one of the six holdouts voted for Rep.-elect Jim Jordan of Ohio.

    ‘SIMPLY PERSONAL’: MARJORIE TAYLOR GREENE DISPELS HOPE ‘NEVER KEVIN’ HOLDOUTS WILL ACCEPT MCCARTHY CONCESSIONS

    One way around them is to see if any are open to voting “present,” which would not count as a vote and lower the minimum number of votes needed to claim a majority.

    But several members and staff said negotiations – and votes on the House floor – may continue through the weekend as the talks continue.

     

    Read More 

     

    Solana prices fall, and New York AG accuses Celsius ex-CEO of defrauding investors: CNBC Crypto World

    US Top News and Analysis 

    In this video

    SOL.CM=ETH.CM=BTC.CM=

    Share

    Solana prices fall, and New York AG accuses Celsius ex-CEO of defrauding investors: CNBC Crypto World

    CNBC Crypto World features the latest news and daily trading updates from the digital currency markets and provides viewers with a look at what’s ahead with high-profile interviews, explainers, and unique stories from the ever-changing crypto industry. On today’s show, Bradley Duke, the co-CEO of ETC Group, weighs in on the new ruling that could make Celsius customers last in line to collect funds from the bankrupt crypto lender. He also discusses whether the industry currently has enough consumer protections in place.
    12:24
    13 minutes ago

    Read More 

    Two advocacy groups ask Colorado to bar Trump from ballot

    Just In | The Hill 

    Two advocacy groups are leading a rally in Colorado Friday urging Colorado Secretary of State Jena Griswold to bar former President Trump from the state’s ballots on constitutional grounds.

    The rally, led by Mi Familia Vota and Free Speech for the People, is part of a broader push to ask secretaries of state nationwide to eliminate Trump from contention because of his actions on and leading up to the January 6 Capitol insurrection. 

    “Donald Trump violated his oath of office when he led the charge to overturn the results of the 2020 election. His actions only confirmed what the Latino community has long known: he is dangerous,” said Héctor Sanchez Barba, executive director and CEO of Mi Familia Vota: 

    “The disqualification clause in the 14th Amendment is clear: anyone who violates their oath of office is ineligible to run for higher office in the future. Secretaries of State have the power to bar Trump for the ballot. There is ample evidence as to why he is not fit to hold office again, now all we are asking is for a Secretary of State to act.”

    The push to remove Trump comes on the second anniversary of the Capitol insurrection, and as Democrats have lost control of the House, likely dooming any further investigations into the former president’s role.

    “The bipartisan House January 6th Committee showed that Trump engaged in a criminal conspiracy to overturn the results of the 2020 election, culminating with his incitement of violent insurrection at the Capitol on January 6, 2021,” said Alexandra Flores-Quilty, campaign director for Free Speech For People.

    While the push for secretaries of state to scrub Trump is national, organizers said they chose Colorado for the rally in part because it’s the home state of Rep. Lauren Boebert (R-Colo.), seen as one of the former president’s staunchest supporters in Congress.

    “The Insurrectionist Disqualification Clause is clear: Trump’s actions were a violation of his oath of office and therefore make him constitutionally ineligible for any future run for office under Section 3 of the Fourteenth Amendment. Secretaries of State now have a duty to uphold the Constitution and protect our democracy by ensuring Trump is barred from the ballot,” said Flores-Quilty.

    ​Latino, News, Colorado, Donald Trump, Jan. 6 attack, Lauren Boebert Read More 

    Democrats, immigrant advocates raise red flags over Biden border plan: ‘Deeply disappointed’

    Latest & Breaking News on Fox News 

    Some Democratic lawmakers and immigrant activist groups are reacting with concern to President Biden’s announcement Thursday of new border security measures — particularly the expansion of Title 42 expulsions to include three additional nationalities – calling the moves “deeply” disappointing.

    Biden, in a speech from the White House on Thursday, announced an expansion of a humanitarian parole program for Venezuelan nationals to include Haitians, Cubans and Nicaraguans. That program will allow 30,000 individuals a month from all four counties to be paroled into the U.S. for a two-year period as long as they have a financial sponsor and pass other conditions. Those who attempt to enter illegally are made ineligible for the program.

    However, it is also accompanied by an agreement with Mexico that they will take 30,000 nationals from each country via expulsions under the Title 42 public health order. Should that order end, the expulsions will take place under the usual Title 8 removals.

    Additionally, the administration announced a proposed rule that would make illegal immigrants ineligible for asylum if they “circumvent available, established pathways to lawful migration” and do not claim asylum in a country through which they traveled to get to the U.S.

    BIDEN ANNOUNCES BORDER VISIT, NEW MEASURES AS PRESSURE GROWS OVER OVERWHELMING MIGRANT SURGE

    Biden, as well as Homeland Security Secretary Alejandro Mayorkas, said the moves were an important step towards dealing with the ongoing crisis at the southern border — which saw more than 2.3 million migrant encounters in FY 2022, and numbers in FY 2023 that have so far outpaced those of the prior fiscal year.

    “These actions alone that I’m going to announce today aren’t going to fix our entire immigration system but they can help us a good deal in managing what is a difficult challenge,” Biden said.

    While the moves took heat from critics on the right for being too little too late amid a border crisis they put down to the administration’s own policies, it also received criticism from those typically more sympathetic to the administration’s stance on migration.

    While those on the left of the immigration debate welcomed the expanded legal pathways, multiple senators and immigration groups expressed anger and disappointment at the move to lean more heavily into the Trump-era Title 42 order.

    “While we understand the challenges the nation is facing at the Southern border exacerbated by Republican obstruction to modernizing our immigration system, we are deeply disappointed by the Biden administration’s decision to expand the use of Title 42,” Sens. Bob Menendez, D-N.J., Ben Ray Luján, D-N.M., Alex Padilla, D-Calif., and Cory Booker, D-N.J., said in a joint statement.

    “Continuing to use this failed and inhumane Trump-era policy put in place to address a public health crisis will do nothing to restore the rule of law at the border. Instead, it will increase border crossings over time and further enrich human smuggling networks. We are pleased to see an increase in the access to parole for Cubans, Nicaraguans, Venezuelans, and Haitians, but this narrow benefit will exclude thousands of migrants fleeing violence and persecution who do not have the ability or economic means to qualify for the new parole process,” they said.

    AS BIDEN VISITS BORDER, STILL NO APOLOGY OVER FALSE CLAIMS THAT BORDER PATROL AGENTS WHIPPED MIGRANTS

    The coalition of senators also expressed concern about the transit ban regulations that they said would separate families and strand “migrants fleeing persecution and torture in countries unable to protect them.”

    Meanwhile, FWD.us, an immigration advocacy group established by Meta CEO Mark Zuckerberg, urged the administration to back off from the new announcement.

    “Multiple things can be true at the same time: the Biden administration’s creation of new legal pathways that will protect vulnerable individuals is a critical and positive step; expanding Title 42 is entirely wrong; and we strongly oppose the proposed policy that would disqualify many from even seeking asylum on U.S. soil – a policy that seemingly resembles the illegal transit ban created by the Trump administration – and we strongly urge the administration not to pursue this policy,” FWD.us President Todd Schulte said.

    DHS Secretary Mayorkas had rejected the idea that that policy was similar to those implemented during the Trump administration, anticipating such criticism. He pointed to the ability for migrants to use a phone application at ports of entry to apply for asylum, s well as the additional parole program.

    “So those two avenues in addition to everything else we have done thus far make this quite distinct from anything under the prior administration,” he said.

    Meanwhile, the American Civil Liberties Union — which recently sued the Biden administration over Title 42 — described the policy as not just Trumpian, but also illegal.

    “And previously, President Biden explicitly condemned Trump’s asylum ban against people who travel through other countries and made a campaign promise to end it and restore our asylum laws,” the statement by Jonathan Blazer, the union’s director of border strategies, said. “But today the White House announced that he plans to bring a version of that ban back. His commitments to people seeking safety will ring utterly hollow if he moves forward in substituting one illegal anti-asylum Trump policy for another.”

    However, the proposal did gain some support from some Democrats. Notably, New York City Mayor Eric Adams — who has criticized the Biden administration for not doing enough with the flood of migrant that the Big Apple has been encountering — called it an “important, positive step.”

    We appreciate this administration’s partnership and response to our request for action, and we are hopeful this policy will help better control the flow of asylum seekers arriving at the southern border,” he said. “At the same time, we still need a long-term and proactive strategy to manage the crisis we are seeing.” 

    <img src="” title=”Democrats, immigrant advocates raise red flags over Biden border plan: ‘Deeply disappointed'” /> 

    Read More 

     

    Think you’ve got investing skill? Your overconfidence may be costly

    US Top News and Analysis 

    Fuse | Corbis | Getty Images

    When it comes to investing, you may know less than you think — and that overconfidence may be costly.

    Almost 2 out of every 3 investors rate their investment knowledge highly, and 42% are comfortable making investment decisions, according to a recent report published by the Financial Industry Regulatory Authority. Younger investors ages 18 to 34 were more likely to be confident than those in older age groups (35- to 54-year-olds and those over age 55).

    However, investors with more confidence also disproportionately answered more questions incorrectly on a financial quiz — suggesting that “many younger investors are not simply uninformed, but potentially misinformed,” according to the report.

    More from Personal Finance:
    The best way to pay down high-interest debt
    Where to keep cash amid high inflation and rising interest rates
    3 changes to required withdrawals from 401(k) plans and IRAs

    Why your investment ‘ego’ may be costly

    This isn’t to say that confidence is a bad thing. But “overconfidence bias” — the behavioral principle of overestimating one’s financial acumen — can have damaging results.

    “It should be no surprise that for the average investor, overconfidence can potentially be a pathway to poor portfolio performance,” Omar Aguilar, CEO and chief investment officer at Charles Schwab Asset Management, wrote on the subject.

    For example, this “ego-driven tendency” might trick your brain into thinking it’s possible to consistently beat the stock market with risky bets, Aguilar said. (Hint: Statistics show it’s tough for the pros, so it’s bound to be hard for the average person, too.)

    Beyond adding potentially unnecessary risk to a portfolio, overconfidence might introduce higher relative costs associated with the frequent buying and selling of assets, Aguilar said.

    Social media contributes to overconfidence

    Knowing how confident you should or shouldn’t be is known as “calibration.” People are generally well-calibrated if they get frequent feedback on decisions, letting them know if they were directionally right or wrong, said Dan Egan, vice president of behavioral finance and investing at Betterment.

    The problem is that people don’t often get that feedback in financial settings, Egan said.

    “It’s very easy to have an impression of, ‘Actually, I know a lot and haven’t been proven wrong,'” Egan said. “And we don’t go looking for it.”

    “We tend to protect our egos,” he added. “We want to think well of ourselves.”

    VIDEO2:1902:19
    The SEC is not just concerned about protecting retail investors, says legal firm

    Technology and social media have also made it easier for people to develop false impressions of their own knowledge and skill, Egan said. For example, investors can fall prey to “confirmation bias,” whereby they seek out evidence in social-media circles that confirms a previously held (but potentially false) belief about an investment.

    Of course, technology and the internet have also made it easier than ever to access information — though users must then discern whether that data source is accurate and reliable.

    And while younger investors may disproportionately overestimate their knowledge, the extent to which it’s doing them harm is unclear, Egan said. They might not have amassed much money so early in their careers, meaning a mistake may be less costly relative to seniors, who’ve built up a sizable nest egg over their working lives and have more to lose.

    When an investment is trendy, ‘start watching yourself’

    Overconfidence bias tends to manifest most often with get-rich-quick type investment decisions, Egan said.

    “That’s when you need to start watching yourself,” he said.

    Take the meme-stock bonanza or the cryptocurrency rush in 2021, for example. Millions of investors created brokerage accounts early in the year largely to capitalize on a runup in prices; if they got in or sold at the wrong time, it could have cost them big bucks.

    Similarly, overconfidence may lead rushed investors to accidentally buy the wrong stock, Egan said.

    For example, many investors bought the stock of Signal Advance last year following a tweet by Elon Musk, who told followers to “use Signal,” leading the stock to surge by over 400% in a day. However, investors inadvertently bought the wrong stock — the Tesla and SpaceX CEO was referring to the encrypted messaging app Signal, whereas Signal Advance is a small component manufacturer.

    How to check your investing ego

    Westend61 | Westend61 | Getty Images

    One way to overcome potential overconfidence is to examine past investment decisions and how they worked out, Aguilar said. Analyze how overconfidence may have led to poor outcomes over time and what may have been achieved with a more realistic approach, he said.

    Further, investors can use a “pre-mortem” strategy, Aguilar said.

    The concept — invented by psychologist Gary Klein and endorsed by advocates like economist and Nobel laureate Daniel Kahneman — tries to overcome overconfidence by imagining potential outcomes from a future perspective. The purpose is to improve a decision rather than have it “autopsied” after death, Klein wrote.

    Imagine — perhaps one, five, 10 or 20 years from now — that your investment was a success. Think through the reasons for that potential success. Likewise, imagine it was a disaster and think through the reasons why, Aguilar said. The exercise may help people see “potential risks and missteps” they overlooked due to excessive optimism, Aguilar said.

    “To be aware of the error, I think, is unquestionably worthwhile,” Kahneman has said of the strategy.

    Read More