Thursday, February 04, 2021 | | *available from 8 am et |
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| | | 1. Generals Ban Facebook in Myanmar Myanmar’s military government, which seized power Monday over disputed election results, blocked social media to quiet “fake news” from dissenters. Protesters have voiced their opposition to the coup on Facebook, which is used by half the nation’s 53 million inhabitants, with posts showing people honking car horns and banging on pots and pans. Some used virtual private networks to circumvent the Facebook block, like demonstrators in Mandalay who livestreamed a small protest. Meanwhile, detained civilian leader Aung San Suu Kyi, whose political party won 80 percent of the vote, has been charged with illegally importing communications equipment. Sources: Al Jazeera, Reuters |
| 2. Feds Charge Proud Boys in Capitol Conspiracy As the casket of Officer Brian Sicknick, killed in the Jan. 6 Capitol attack, lay in honor in the building’s rotunda, the Justice Department continued to level charges over the assault. Two Proud Boys members, Nicholas Ochs and Nicholas DeCarlo, face conspiracy charges for allegedly plotting to stop Congress from certifying Nov. 3 election results. Authorities arrested another member, Ethan Nordean, accusing him of soliciting protective gear and communications equipment for the storming. Meanwhile, Canada yesterday designated the group — which former President Donald Trump famously instructed to “stand back and stand by” — as a “neo-fascist” terrorist entity. Sources: NYT, CNN, AP |
| 3. Greene, Cheney Spared by Republicans There are people on both sides. House Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy yesterday decided against stripping committee assignments from Georgia Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene after she reportedly apologized to her colleagues for her history of promoting violence and conspiracy theories. McCarthy also argued for the GOP’s polar opposite, Wyoming Rep. Liz Cheney, to retain the party's No. 3 House leadership post. Cheney, who voted to impeach President Trump, survived his allies’ vote to oust her 145 to 61. But McCarthy’s solution to the growing GOP rift could disenchant Trump’s base, while keeping Greene a target for Democrats in 2022. Sources: Washington Post, Fox News, Reuters, The Hill |
| 4. GameStop Guru Probed for Securities Violations Was upending Wall Street not part of the job? Massachusetts regulators are looking into Keith Gill, who convinced thousands of Reddit day traders to run up the price of GameStop shares, forcing hedge funds to spend billions covering bets that the stock would decline. The registered securities broker had quit his day job in “financial wellness” education, but was still on the payroll while fomenting market mayhem. Gill may testify before a congressional committee Feb. 18, along with federal securities officials and executives from Robinhood, the no-fee stock trading platform used by many of Gill’s followers. Sources: NYT, BI |
| | | 6. Hungry for a New Podcast? Listen up! Based on the HISTORY Channel documentary series, OZY and HISTORY are proud to bring you your new podcast obsession: The Food That Built America. Hear the stories of the bold visionaries risking everything to create some of the most recognizable brands on the planet. In the first episode, learn about a chemical genius and opium addict, John Pemberton, and a brilliant pharmacist-turned-promoter, Asa Candler, who transformed an obscure soda tonic into one of the most recognizable brands on the planet: Coca-Cola. Listen now on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, Stitcher or wherever else you get your podcasts. |
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| | | The start button to an all-electric future has been pushed. Introducing the revolutionary Ultium platform, engineered for range, power and flexibility. General Motors will offer 30 new electric vehicles globally by 2025. Everybody In — learn more at GM.com. |
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| | | 1. Federal Judge: Vaccinate Prisoners Now They’re on few priority lists. But a federal judge in Oregon has ruled that the state’s prison inmates should be vaccinated now, putting them on par with nursing home residents and corrections officers for priority. In her Tuesday ruling, U.S. Magistrate Judge Stacie Beckerman said “constitutional rights are not suspended during a crisis,” noting that the state is obligated to protect those in its custody. Oregon said it won’t appeal, saying vaccinating prisoners won’t influence the inoculation of others, such as the teachers Gov. Kate Brown has controversially prioritized in an effort to reopen schools. Sources: The Hill, OPB What do you think? Do prisoners deserve the same consideration for vaccinations as others? Reply to this email, including your first name, last initial and city or state, and we may include your view in the PDB. |
| 2. Parler CEO Says He Was Fired He wanted moderation. That’s what John Matze, ex-CEO of social media site Parler, says after being fired last week amid disputes with Rebekah Mercer, a Republican donor who controls its board. Amazon stopped hosting the “free speech” platform after extremists used it to organize the Jan. 6 Capitol assault. While Mercer has yet to comment, Matze claims he sought to get the site operating again while curbing calls for violence and promotion of conspiracies like QAnon. It may be moot, however, as a federal court has rejected Parler’s lawsuit to force Amazon to resume hosting the platform. Sources: NPR, The Verge |
| 3. Pollution Helps the Climate — Sort Of Problem solved? Lockdowns have stifled pollution-causing activity and cleared the air, but that’s counterintuitively worsened global warming, according to a new study by the National Center for Atmospheric Research. Aerosol pollutants in the atmosphere scatter the sun’s rays, meaning less sunlight reaches Earth. So with less pollution, normally smoggy places like the U.S. and Russia have recently warmed by 0.37 degrees Celsius. But unlike that temporary effect, greenhouse gases linger in the atmosphere, making warming worse in the long run. So the good news stands: The pandemic will slightly slow climate change’s catastrophic march. Sources: SciTechDaily, EcoWatch |
| 4. Female Directors Make History With Golden Globes Nods It’s a very exclusive club. In 77 years, the Hollywood Foreign Press Association had nominated just five women for best director. Yesterday that number jumped 60 percent, adding Nomadland’s Chloé Zhao, One Night in Miami's Regina King and Promising Young Woman's Emerald Fennell. Could the pressure on the Globes, like Natalie Portman calling out the “all-male nominees” during the 2018 ceremony, be bearing fruit? King also joins a list of just six nominated Black directors, while Zhao is the first Asian woman nominated. If a woman wins, she’ll join just Barbra Streisand, who won for Yentl in 1984, while King would be the first Black winner. Sources: ET, IndieWire |
| 5. How the Little Guys Saved Hometown Baseball They were three distant cities: But Erie, Pennsylvania, Binghamton, New York, and Chattanooga, Tennessee, were united by a shared loss, OZY reports, after Major League Baseball announced in 2019 that it was severing ties with dozens of minor league teams. Without a link to the big leagues, they had little chance of survival. But they fought back, rallying fans with the #SaveHometownBaseball campaign and eventually getting the attention of now-Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer. After a yearlong struggle, they learned in December 2020 that their campaign’s swing had connected and their teams were safe at home. Sources: OZY |
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