| | | Mourners surround coffins of Bolivians killed in a clash over President Evo Morales' ouster Friday. Source: Getty |
| IMPORTANT | 01 | “It’s not something I would do.” That was one Republican committee member’s reaction to President Donald Trump’s mid-hearing tweetstorm excoriating the Ukraine ambassador he’d fired. “Everywhere Marie Yovanovitch went turned bad,” Trump wrote, implying that the career diplomat was responsible for U.S. misfortunes in Somalia, where 19 soldiers were killed in 1993. Democrats called the messages “witness intimidation” at the moment Yovanovitch was describing presidential behavior she found unsettling. Is the president losing? President Bill Clinton survived Somalia and impeachment, but some argue that Trump’s otherwise effective truculence is weakening against an increasing number of respected accusers. Read OZY’s Special Briefing on Ukraine’s survival. | |
| 02 | Clashes over the ouster of Bolivian President Evo Morales reportedly caused five deaths yesterday, part of monumental shift in recent weeks for Latin America, its erstwhile entrenched leaders being challenged on both the left and the right. That’s included former Brazilian President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva’s release from jail, fomenting trouble for far-right President Jair Bolsonaro, as well as unrest opposing Chile’s billionaire leader. Is the change for the better? Writer Jon Lee Anderson sees a new sense of fairness developing on the continent, but instability is weakening financial indicators in already shaky economies. | |
| 03 | Ten candidates take the stage Wednesday for the fifth presidential Democratic debate in Georgia, a state that could be in contention next November. Former Vice President Joe Biden clings to a national polling lead, but Massachusetts Sen. Elizabeth Warren isn’t far behind. Who’s not debating? The big wild card of late is former New York Mayor Michael Bloomberg. The billionaire beats President Donald Trump in polls that show top contenders with lackluster showings in key swing states. Don’t miss OZY’s Donald Dossier on a billionaire’s chance of winning Democrats’ hearts. | |
| 04 | The last time this happened, it didn’t end quietly. Rallies against the Tehran government’s cut in fuel subsidies led to an attack that set fire to an oil facility and an exchange of gunfire in the southern city of Sirjan. Unrest continued today, with protesters in the capital and Kermanshah seen in online videos peacefully blocking traffic and inviting police to join them. How bad is it? The demonstrations aren’t as far-reaching as economic protests two years ago, but with February elections coming, officials will be hard-pressed to justify last night’s sudden 50 percent gasoline price hike. | |
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| | INTRIGUING | 01 | The scavenger-gnawed body parts of Jerold Christopher Haas were found in an Ohio forest in November 2018. The brilliant coder was the co-founder of Tessr, a startup that aimed to use blockchain technology to handle university records. Haas seemed on the verge of success, but in September last year, he bolted from a friend’s car and was never seen alive again. How did he die? A detective believes Haas fell from a tree after isolating himself in the woods, but his mother suspects he was murdered. Don’t miss this OZY story about blockchain love. | |
| 02 | Writer Paul Kvinta found himself face to face with illicit trafficking of elephants from Laos, where the animals are already threatened by ivory hunters, to China’s animal parks. He also found himself close to Asian elephants, two of which Kvinta negotiated to purchase, freeing them from a life in chains. Despite Laotian law prohibiting their export, entire herds of the animals are marched across the Chinese border on “lease.” What’s the impact? Experts predict that the 800 pachyderms in Laos will be gone by 2030 if the trade isn’t curbed. Come with OZY to visit an elephant sanctuary. | |
| 03 | A chance encounter at her legal services job 32 years ago gave Sharon Dietrich a mission. The Philadelphia lawyer discovered that most people who have been incarcerated want their records expunged so that they can start anew, eligible to get a job and rent an apartment without their past impeding them, OZY reports. Dietrich’s seemingly bleeding-heart cause has, through her tireless advocacy, even attracted bipartisan support, with Pennsylvania passing a Clean Slate law, which automatically seals conviction records. Is this catching on? It is. Utah has followed suit, and Michigan, California and Connecticut are considering similar legislation. | |
| 04 | It’s the mother of all #MeToo cases, and an upcoming film aims to tell all — despite nondisclosure agreements. Bombshell splices actual footage with scenes featuring actors painstakingly made up to resemble their real-life counterparts. Those involved in the project praised victims who broke nondisclosure agreements — unlike headline accuser Gretchen Carlson, played by Nicole Kidman — to tell their stories. When does it hit theaters? Also starring Charlize Theron as Megyn Kelly and John Lithgow as Roger Ailes, the Fox CEO whom Carlson accused of sexual harassment, the film is set for U.S. release on Dec. 13. OZY examines the patriarchy’s desperation. | |
| 05 | An NFL offense had three chances to get a first down, then a fourth down for punting. Sixteen years ago, teams tried to convert fourth-and-two situations fewer than 1 in 6 times. Then came coach Bill Belichick’s 2009 blunder: Ahead on his own 28-yard line with barely a minute left in the game, he gambled on gaining 2 yards. A controversial call denied his Patriots the first down, and Colts quarterback Peyton Manning charged into the end zone for the win. And now? The “mistake” stirred an analytics-fueled debate that continues, and this season teams are taking the same risk twice as often. | |
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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. | | Opinion This OZY series captures the global warming-induced changes you've never thought about. | |
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