| | | Thousands of Australian students demonstrate during a climate rally Friday in Sydney. Source: Getty |
| IMPORTANT | 01 | Rep. Adam Schiff, chair of the House Intelligence Committee, said the White House is blocking congressional Democrats by denying access to a complaint filed last month by a whistleblowing intelligence official. That note to the inspector general of the intelligence community — described by the watchdog as “urgent” — reportedly centers on a “promise” President Donald Trump made during discussions with a foreign leader. Schiff said the inspector general refused to discuss the complaint with the committee during testimony yesterday. What’s the mystery country? Sources suggest the complaint involves Ukraine, where Trump and his allies allegedly pressured officials to investigate the local dealings of ex-Vice President Joe Biden’s son. | |
| 02 | Ahead of the United Nations Climate Action Summit next week, another worldwide strike kicked off in Australia today, where more than 300,000 demonstrators are said to have taken part. Some 800 events are expected today in the U.S., where 16-year-old Swedish activist Greta Thunberg is preparing to attend the global summit, and thousands more are planned in 139 countries. How are officials reacting? In various ways: While Australia’s acting prime minister called the rallies “just a disruption,” more than 1 million students in New York City will be allowed to ditch class to support the strike. Read OZY’s original series about how climate change affects mental health. | |
| 03 | “I am wary of being definitive about this.” That’s how Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau responded to a reporter yesterday when asked if there were more images of him wearing blackface makeup. Facing a tight election race Oct. 21, the progressive darling has publicly apologized twice for wearing racist makeup and costumes — now documented on three separate occasions — but he’s still struggling to move beyond the scandal. Can he pull through? While his political opponents and some commentators have criticized Trudeau’s insensitivity, many Canadian voters appear unfazed and relatively forgiving. | |
| 04 | Amid warnings from Iran about “all-out war,” Secretary of State Mike Pompeo said the U.S. would “build out a coalition” to deter a wider conflict in the Middle East following last weekend’s attacks on Saudi oil facilities. The United Arab Emirates, Saudi Arabia, the U.K. and Bahrain have all said they’d join. Still, the U.S. faces its largest test in decades as a guarantor of security for the region’s oil-rich states. Why does that matter? Experts say Washington runs the risk of losing its allies’ trust if it can’t live up to that commitment. Don’t miss OZY’s Fast Forward about the Arab world’s war on terror. | |
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| | INTRIGUING | 01 | The overall population of birds fell from 10 billion to 7 billion over the past five decades, according to a study published in Science yesterday. Twelve families of birds — including larks, blackbirds, sparrows, warblers, finches and swallows — were the hardest hit, losing about 53 percent of their populations. Scientists attribute much of the “staggering, devastating” decline to habitat loss and a drop in insect numbers. What can be done? Experts say that in addition to restoring native plants, humans can also reduce the use of toxic pesticides and take steps to prevent collisions with windows and predation from pet cats. | |
| 02 | Confirming long-awaited plans, but offering few specifics, travel behemoth Airbnb has said that it will pursue an initial public offering sometime in 2020. Analysts value the company — which began renting air mattresses in a San Francisco apartment in 2007, but now boasts more than 7 million rentals in 100,000 cities worldwide — at $35 billion. That figure tops any hotel chain. Is going public a guaranteed success? Tech unicorns have posted mixed results from their much-vaunted IPOs this year, suggesting investors may be more careful going forward. Don’t miss OZY’s Special Briefing on this year’s tech IPOs. | |
| 03 | The rise of online ordering has been credited with reinvigorating traditional cuisines and creating niche delivery-only food services — but for conventional restaurants, the losses outweigh the benefits, OZY reports. Huge discounts to entice customers to use platforms like DoorDash and ChowNow cut into already razor-thin hospitality profits, while couriers across the planet are complaining about poor conditions and low pay. Is anyone listening? Their complaints are finding open ears: As the gig economy continues to expand, worker protests are becoming a magnet for mainstream progressive lawmakers. | |
| 04 | An investigation has revealed that women’s work is vastly underrepresented in the art world: While 260,470 pieces have entered U.S. museum collections since 2008, women produced just 29,247 of them. Even within the ranks of female artists, compensation is unevenly distributed, with five artists comprising 41 percent of the total and contemporary sculptor Yayoi Kusama alone accounting for 14 percent. Overall, art by women makes up only 2 percent of global acquisitions. How was the study conducted? It looked at 26 major art museums and institutions in the U.S., as well as analyzed the global art market between 2008 and 2018. | |
| 05 | Saudi Prince Abdullah bin Mosaad bin Abdulaziz Al Saud, the new owner of British soccer squad Sheffield United, says he’s open to doing business with relatives of Osama bin Laden. The family, who disowned the al-Qaida terrorist long before the Sept. 11 attacks, has expressed interest in buying shares in the Premier League team. After raising eyebrows, Abdullah vouched for the family, claiming the bin Laden surname shouldn’t be tarnished by “one black sheep.” What’s Abdullah’s plan? He has promised to bring in more Saudi sponsors instead of selling the team to make a quick buck. | |
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| Caught Up? Now Vault Ahead ... | To get more fresh stories and bold ideas in your inbox, check out The Daily Dose. | | Fast Forward DoorDash and its global peers disrupted the restaurant business and squeezed workers. Now they’re turning the tables. | |
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