Soft power hothouse | Brigadoon Weekend

Brigadoon Weekend

Your weekly dose of the emerging issues + independent thinkers shaping commerce + culture

November 27, 2021

Ross Rant:

Soft power.

Joseph Nye coined the term soft power in the late 1980s.

Simply put, soft power is a nation's ability to persuade others to do what it wants without force or coercion.

Nye states the world's most successful nations need both hard and soft power -- the ability to coerce others as well as the ability to shape their long-term attitudes and preferences.

Nye initially set out three primary sources of soft power: political values, culture, and foreign policy.

Traditionally, power in international relations is easily measurable metrics in inflexible terms - think military and economic might.

Soft power makes use of tactics that are often hard to measure, can take years to bear fruit, and aren't as sexy as a nuclear-powered aircraft carrier.

But today, soft power matters more than ever and shuns carrots and sticks.

Soft power succeeds in building relationships, using communications and storytelling, operating under universal international rules, and harnessing a nation's unique resources that make a country attractive to the greater world.

The United States can undoubtedly dominate others through money and might, but America has excelled in using soft power.

From companies like Apple, foundations like Charity Water, universities like Stanford, to sports leagues like the National Basketball Association, America is a soft power hothouse.

When I read about the Thucydides Trap leading the US and China down a path to increased competition and possibly even war, I think no.

If the US can't succeed with Walt Disney World, Levi's, Tesla, Harvard, Serena Williams, Coca-Cola, Run DMC, Kelly Slater, and Detroit-style pizza, then what are we doing?

Sitting in London Heathrow a few years back, I was observing a family from Norway. The kids dressed in Under Armour, the parents were wearing smart casuals from the GAP, and the entire crew was teched-out in designed-in California Apple swag.

It was the all-American family living in Oslo.

US culture and aspirations have been influential in helping the US government secure partners and enhance alliances.

Sure there are limits of soft power: it tends to have diffuse effects like jello, and sometimes it is not skillfully wielded to achieve specific outcomes.

However, US economic success and security hinges as much on winning hearts and minds as it does on winning wars.

Plus, with more of the world easily accessed by trans-continental flights and the internet, countries like Germany, Canada, South Korea, India, and China are all using the same tools and tactics to improve their strength and influence.

Game on.

-Marc


Weekend Reads:

With China, a ‘Cold War’ analogy is lazy and dangerous
Joseph S. Nye Jr.

+ Nye coined the term “soft power” in 1989 and is a professor @ Harvard University

Britain should harness the soft power of James Bond
Alec Marsh

Tour de France soft power: Around 3.5 billion people tune in to watch the Tour each year during the weeks of coverage, in 190 countries, making it the third-largest sporting event in the world.

How Qatar uses soft power to conquer the world: Qatar has recognized the need to secure its position on the global stage by courting the West and investing in sports. But its rights record could undermine its chance to conquer the heart of the international community.
DW

Soft Power by Robert Winder review — Max Hastings on a new method of global dominance: The way to influence the world is with fizzy drinks and pop music, not military might.
The Times

Monocle's annual soft power survey judges which nations’ soft-power strengths make the grade. Top ten are listed below and the full article is here.

Top 10:

1. Germany
2. South Korea
3. France
4. Japan
5. Taiwan
6. Switzerland
7. New Zealand
8. Sweden
9. Greece
10. Canada


Swiss flair: Megan Gibson writes, when it comes to money and diplomacy, Switzerland is an influential global player. But do other aspects of the national brand suit a broader international role? We asked seven of its best about what the future holds.
Monocle

The growth of soft power in the world’s largest democracy: Isha Prakash writes, in a country with such a vast history as well as such rich culture, heritage, and traditions- the Government of India recognizes and acknowledges the soft power potential. Hence, with just a little effort- this can be utilized optimally to boost international influence.
Modern Diplomacy

Hollywood is running out of villains: Kal Raustiala writes what sets the United States apart from the rest of the world is and has always been its soft power. The Soviets may have equaled the Americans in nuclear capability, but they could never rival the appeal of the “American way of life.” And even as China tries to spread its culture across the globe, its rise tends to inspire more trepidation than admiration.
Foreign Affairs


Brigadoon Reads:

Soft Power: The Means To Success In World Politics by Joseph Nye

Why Nations Fail: The Origins of Power, Prosperity, and Poverty by Daron Acemoglu + James A. Robinson

The Big Stick: The Limits of Soft Power and the Necessity of Military Force by Eliot A. Cohen

Soft Power: The New Great Game for Global Dominance by Robert Winder

The World America Made by Robert Kagan


Brigadoon Events:

Brigadoon Workshop: World 2022 | 7 Elections + 7 Topics

Marc Ross | Global Communications Strategist + CEO Advisor
Wednesday, December 8, 2021 | 12:00 - 2:00 pm ET
$150 - $300
In-person, Virtual, or On-demand

Sign up here.

Brigadoon Workshop: Communications 2022 | Strategy + Tactics

Marc Ross | Global Communications Strategist + CEO Advisor
Thursday, December 9, 2021 | 12:00 - 2:00 pm ET
$50 - $125
In-person, Virtual, or On-demand

Sign up here.

Brigadoon Monthly Call: Train yourself to be more creative

Major Tom Gaines + Dr. Angus Fletcher
Wednesday, December 15, 2021 | 2:00 - 2:45 pm ET
$15 - $45
Google Meet live or On-demand

Sign up here.


Brigadoon Store:

Brigadoon Membership
Yearly or Monthly subscriptions

Brigadoon Daily
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Brigadoon Deck | Q4 2021

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Have a great weekend.

-Marc

Marc A. Ross | Founder + Chief Curator @ Brigadoon

Brigadoon is Global Street Smarts.

Curating the emerging issues + independent thinkers
shaping commerce + culture

More @
thebrigadoon.com

Brigadoon Daily | Nov. 19

Brigadoon Daily

Your daily dose of the emerging issues + independent thinkers shaping commerce + culture

November 19, 2021

2022 is only 43 days away. You ready?

TOP FIVE


1. #whereispengshuai

2. The untold story of Von Dutch

3. A new meaning to ‘working in the garden’

4. Are AirPods out?

5. It appears no one wants to be a Washington fan


BRIGADOON EVENT

Brigadoon Workshop | World 2022

7 Elections + 7 Topics

Wednesday, December 8 @ 12:00 - 2:00 pm ET
Washington, DC or Virtual

More @ thebrigadoon.com/events

GLOBALIZATION + STATECRAFT

First fires, now floods: British Columbia and Washington reeling from atmospheric river: WP reports the Pacific Northwest and British Columbia have endured a punishing siege of climate disasters since the summer, supercharged by human-caused climate change. After an unprecedented heatwave to close June and a rash of wildfires that followed, the region is now recovering from devastating floods and landslides, blamed for at least two deaths.

Tories see red after Johnson axes north’s high-speed trains: The government accused of selling the north short over rail plans.
The Times

+ "On a clear road, I crashed the car into a ditch." -- Boris Johnson speaking to the 1922 Committee about his handling of the sleaze row over the past two weeks.

Today: Priti Patel, the UK Home Secretary, addresses the Heritage Foundation on the last day of her trip to Washington.

British politics is blind to the rise of Sinn Féin: Westminster just cannot accept what happens in Ireland matters over there.
Finn McRedmond

Far-right ideas are gaining a renewed respectability in France: They have a deep and troubling history.
Economist

A French dictionary added a gender-neutral pronoun. Opponents say it’s too ‘woke.’ WP reports the decision from a major French dictionary to add “iel,” a gender-neutral pronoun that has become popular in the non-binary community in recent years, to its lexicon has drawn heavy criticism from political leaders in France, a move that highlights once again the controversy around efforts to make the Romance language more reflective of an inclusive society.

Gaffe or warning? Biden remarks on Taiwan keep the world guessing: The US leader makes an 'independence' comment and walks it back, a day after meeting with Xi.
Nikkei

Bloomberg: China must realize Taiwan isn’t Hong Kong, Tony Blair says

+ “They have to understand that Taiwan is not the same as Hong Kong. And there are very strong views on this in the West.”

SCMP: EU shelves Taiwan trade upgrade amid high-wire balancing act on China

+ Announcement of new strategic format for liaising with Taiwan on trade and economic issues is postponed, although it is likely to be revisited

+ Some EU lawmakers want the Taiwan issue to be higher on the bloc’s agenda, but there is concern that ties with Beijing could plunge further


Navy holds ‘navigation stand-down’ for submarine force after undersea collision: Navy Times reports the US Navy’s submarine community began a “navigation stand-down” this week following the submarine Connecticut’s collision with an undersea mountain last month in the South China Sea.

Japan looks to open its borders amid labor shortage: WP reports immigration was once a taboo subject, but an aging population and a disruptive pandemic have started to change that.

Japan to raise defense spending by $6.1bn this year: Nikkei reports the supplementary bill to include the largest-ever injection for security.

China poses a national security threat unlike any the US has seen before: This week's virtual summit between President Joe Biden and China's President Xi Jinping may have restored a tone of respect between the world's two largest powers, but US intelligence is telling a different story.
Consider This Podcast

Xi Jinping moves closer to reviving 'chairman' title to match Mao: Chinese leader paves the way to powerful post with historical resolution.
Nikkei

China’s communist authorities are tightening their grip on the private sector: Its growth model is at risk.
Economist

Bloomberg: Outcry grows as China breaks silence on missing tennis star

+ Chinese player not seen since alleging affair with official

+ State media says Peng sent letter saying she’s ‘resting’


AFP: Serena 'shocked, devastated' as concern mounts for Peng

+ @serenawilliams: I am devastated and shocked to hear about the news of my peer, Peng Shuai. I hope she is safe and found as soon as possible. This must be investigated and we must not stay silent. Sending love to her and her family during this incredibly difficult time. #whereispengshuai

On China, women’s tennis beats the NBA: The WTA calls for an investigation into a charge of sexual assault.
WSJ - Editorial

Bloomberg: Biden says US ‘considering’ partial boycott of Beijing Olympics

AFP: US mulls diplomatic boycott of Beijing Olympics

+ Beijing games open Feb. 4 as China battles Covid outbreaks

RBA warns of ‘faddish’ crypto crash: The Reserve Bank of Australia has warned users and investors in fad-fuelled cryptocurrencies such as bitcoin they risk holding speculative assets with “niche” uses that could lose most of their value.
AFR

Why Chile’s presidential vote comes at a crazy time
Bloomberg

‘Everybody’s absolutely horrified’: High society is bracing itself for Ghislaine Maxwell’s trial: What will be revealed? Who might she name? Jeffrey Epstein’s right-hand woman is going on trial for their alleged crimes — and those who used to know her can’t stop talking about it.
RS

The world is entering a new era of big government: How should classical liberals respond?
Economist

COVID

Ireland introduces new COVID-19 restrictions, including a curfew for pubs, restaurants and clubs.

+ Sweden’s public health agency is recommending that vaccine passports be brought in for indoor events with more than 100 attendees from 1 December.

Germany is experiencing a ‘dramatic’ fourth wave, Angela Merkel has said. The country recorded more than 65,000 new infections in the past 24 hours and its vaccine commission has recommended boosters for all over-18s.

About 99.7% of all active-duty sailors are at least partially vaccinated against the coronavirus less than two weeks ahead of the US Navy’s deadline, the service announced Wednesday.

Disney Cruise Line will now require all guests aged 5 or older to be vaccinated against the coronavirus.

Do masks really slash the risk of catching COVID?
Ross Clark

+ Wearing a mask cuts covid spread by 53%, according to a new study.

America slowly learns to live with COVID: Shots are an achievement but not a miracle, and other realities with which we’re coming to terms.
Peggy Noonan

The COVID lab leak theory just got even stronger
Matt Ridley

Alina Chan: COVID-19: What is the real truth? The origin?
The James Altucher Show

POLITICS + CAMPAIGNS

The Hill: Bill honoring 13 service members killed in Afghanistan heads to Biden's desk

It’s hard to mess up being vice president. But Kamala Harris has.

Marc A. Thiessen

Kamala Harris makes Dan Quayle look good: Biden’s No 2 is way out of her depth but has the ready-made defense that criticism is motivated by sexism and racism.
Gerard Baker

Trump pollster identifies top 7 issue groups within GOP
Axios

1. Dollars & Cents GOP
2. Core GOP Conservatives
3. Don’t Tread on Me GOP
4. Government-Friendly GOP
5. Moralists
6. Border & Order GOP
7. Neo-Cons


Six decades of regional change in House elections: The GOP edge in the South, already large, could grow in 2022.
Sabato's Crystal Ball

States investigate Instagram over how it affects children: WSJ reports a bipartisan coalition of state attorneys general said it is investigating how Instagram recruits and affects young people, amping up the pressure on parent company Meta Platforms over the potential harms to its users.

+ In 2021, the SEC received 12k+ tips from whistleblowers, almost 2x the total from 2020.

Environmentalists sound alarm at US politicians’ embrace of cryptocurrency: Bitcoin and similar blockchain-based currencies require huge amounts of power, predominantly generated from fossil fuels.
Guardian

DISRUPTION + INNOVATION

Toronto is home to the world’s largest lake-powered cooling system. Here’s how it works. Deep lake water cooling (DLWC) is used to cool over 100 buildings in the city. It saves enough electricity to power a town of 25,000 — and it’s so popular the city is pursuing an expansion.
WP

Britain’s Royal Air Force has taken a landmark step towards slashing carbon emissions from its aircraft, announcing Nov. 17 that the service had completed the world’s first flight using 100 percent synthetic fuel together with commercial partner Zero Petroleum.

COMMERCE

Soho House could raise its membership fees next year due to inflation. The group’s owner also reported a 57% rise in total revenue to $180m in Q3.

The problem with Peloton bikes
Richard Taverner

So what is “the metaverse,” exactly?
Kyle Orland

Meta is building VR gloves for the metaverse: The technology is called soft robotics.

Don’t mock the metaverse: The metaverse is already here. It’s just not evenly distributed.
Economist

Bloomberg: Nike jumps into Metaverse With Virtual World on Roblox Platform

A look under the hood of the most successful streaming service on the planet: Netflix’s secret sauce is something none of us ever see.
The Verge

Inside the machine that saved Moore’s Law: The Dutch firm ASML spent $9 billion and 17 years developing a way to keep making denser computer chips.
TR

H&M’s chief technology officer is trying to make smart clothing mainstream, at a time when clothing manufacturers are struggling with complex supply chains and environmental pressure.

The untold story of Von Dutch: Behind the brand that made trucker hats hot in the early 2000s is a messy corporate origin tale, filled with sabotage, and greed.
NYT

China's Baidu to dispatch robotaxis in 100 cities by 2030: Nikkei reports the tech giant expects mass production of self-driving EVs to begin in 2023.

Monarch, which makes autonomous EV tractors, raised $61m in Series B funding.

Bloomberg: Apple accelerates work on car project, aiming for fully autonomous vehicle

Lucid Motors
, which started delivering sedans in a 520-car limited edition last month and plans to make 20,000 vehicles next year. Lucid’s shares, which have more than doubled in the past month, give the company a market value of nearly $90 billion, or $10 billion more than Ford, which sold nearly 4.2 million cars last year.

+ Morgan Stanley’s lead auto analyst, Adam Jonas, said Lucid could be worth as much as $100 billion. Here’s what it would have to do to get there:

+ Sell 700,000 cars a year by 2030, or roughly as many as BMW and Mercedes sell each year in the US, combined.

+ Book an average profit of $80,000 a car, or about double what consumers currently pay for the average car in the US.


Ford, GM step into chip business: WSJ reports Ford said it had entered into a strategic agreement with US-based chip maker GlobalFoundries to develop chips; separately, GM said it was also trying to forge deeper ties with chip makers.

Deere employees end a five-week strike.

WSJ: CVS to close 900 stores over three years

Macy’s hires adviser to study separation of e-commerce business
: WSJ reports an activist investor has pressed the department-store chain to follow the path of Saks Fifth Avenue in spinning off the fast-growing segment. The announcement came as Macy’s posted another quarter of strong sales growth.

Prada heads to Austin, chasing new, wealthy US markets: WSJ reports the maker of high-end shoes, handbags says it ‘underinvested’ and plans stores in places like Austin, Texas, and Baltimore-DC.

Warner Music is reportedly in advanced talks to buy David Bowie’s songwriting catalog.

MARKETING + COMMUNICATIONS

The power of talk: Who gets heard and why
Deborah Tannen

SPACE + SCIENCE

Space junk is spreading, creating the risk of no-go zones for satellites
Time

PERFORMANCE

A new meaning to ‘working in the garden’: With the work-at-home lifestyle likely here to stay, people are taking things outdoors, creating spaces meant for privacy and comfort.
NYT

CULTURE

In central Italy, a dance party by the sea: Last month at La Posta Vecchia, the hotelier Marie-Louise Sciò threw a rollicking reunion for friends and family.
T Magazine

Flashback: Get to know Marie-Louise Sciò
Brigadoon Weekend

It’s the University of Austin against everyone — including itself: The discord in and around the launch of a new, free-thinking university reveals the power of intellectual “independence” — and just how hard it is to credibly claim.
Politico

+ It’s the 20th anniversary of the first Harry Potter film.

Are AirPods out? Why cool kids are wearing wired headphones: Humble ‘retro’ corded headphones are making an unexpected return, for both aesthetic and practical reasons.
WSJ

SPORT

FSO: Rays pitch new stadiums in Tampa Bay, Montreal

+ The Tampa Bay Rays are working to become MLB's first multi-city team.

+ The team is seeking new stadiums in Tampa and Montreal
.

WP: Two-way pioneer Shohei Ohtani wins American League MVP; slugger Bryce Harper awarded National League trophy

Disney shows its cards in pursuit of sports betting dollars
: Now that major leagues are getting on board with gambling, the family-friendly Hollywood giant is eyeing that revenue and may start with a splashy ESPN licensing deal.
THR

Empty seats and scandals: It appears no one wants to be a Washington fan: The team has the lowest attendance in the NFL, and it’s no surprise given the product on and off the field.
Guardian

What’s a soccer player worth? Italy’s regulators are asking. The authorities in Italy are investigating dozens of transfers involving top clubs. In doing so, they might pull back the curtain on accounting practices that defy easy explanation.
NYT

FOS: NBC Sports wins US Premier League rights

+ NBCUniversal and Telemundo have sold out of 2022 World Cup major sponsorship spots

Guardian: ‘One of the worst’: Lewis Hamilton criticizes Qatar over human rights

+ World champion speaks out as Qatar prepares for first F1 GP

+ Mercedes driver says of venues: ‘These places need scrutiny’


Enjoy the ride + plan accordingly.

-Marc

Curation and commentary by Marc A. Ross | Founder @ Brigadoon

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2022 is only 44 days away. You ready?

Brigadoon is hosting two two-session workshops to get you ready for 2022.

World 2022 and Communications 2022.

You have the option to attend in-person or virtually, as well as attend one or both sessions for each workshop.

World 2022 | 7 Elections + 7 Topics

Brigadoon will host a two-session workshop exploring the 7 elections and 7 topics that will shape the year ahead.

This workshop will help you understand the geopolitical landscape, plan for seven critical elections worldwide, and gather insights on the seven topics that will shape commerce and culture as we advance.

Communications 2022 | Strategy + Tactics

Brigadoon will host a two-session workshop exploring the art of communications for world-class executives and dynamic entrepreneurs.

This workshop will help you sort out your communications, identify your best tactics, and help you share your know-how and expertise.

You have the option to attend in-person or virtually, as well as for both workshops, attend one or both sessions.

Be 2022 ready.

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Brigadoon Daily | Nov. 18

Brigadoon Daily

Your daily dose of the emerging issues + independent thinkers shaping commerce + culture

November 18, 2021

Barbados, Biden, British Columbia, Belarus, Blinken, Beltway

TOP FIVE


1. Blinken urges end to Ethiopian civil war on Africa trip

2. During pandemic’s first year, Americans moved at lowest rate in over 70 years

3. Investors hung their hats on Peloton and Zoom last year. What now?

4. Cleveland bank heist mystery solved after 52 years

5. Mino Raiola: From pizzeria worker to football super-agent


BRIGADOON EVENT

Brigadoon Workshop | Communications 2022

Strategy + Tactics

Thursday, December 9 @ 12:00 - 2:00 pm ET
Washington, DC or Virtual

More @ thebrigadoon.com/events

GLOBALIZATION + STATECRAFT

Barbados to become first sovereign nation with an embassy in the metaverse: CoinDesk reports the Caribbean nation is working with multiple metaverse companies to establish digital sovereign land.

Today: Biden hosts the North American Leaders’ Summit with Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau and Mexican President Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador.

AFP: Canada sends military to flood-ravaged Pacific coast

Reuters: British Columbia sees death toll rising from massive flood; Ottawa pledges aid

Belarus: Lukashenko agrees to EU talks on ending migrant standoff
: DW reports in a phone call with German Chancellor Angela Merkel, Belarus' president reportedly said his country is ready to negotiate with the EU on solving the crisis at the Polish border.

Clarissa Eden, British countess and political influencer, dies at 101: NYT reports the iconoclastic niece of Winston Churchill, she was married to Prime Minister Anthony Eden, who was at the helm during the Suez crisis.

They bought houses in Italy for 1 euro — and are using them to give back to the community: Meet the people turning the crumbling homes into businesses and social projects in aging towns.
WP

Nikkei: All-Turkic corridor heralds rise of new Eurasian political bloc

+ Turkey-led group has potential to disrupt Russia-China power balance

AFP: Blinken discusses violence in Sudan and Ethiopia during Kenya visit

AFP: Blinken urges preservation of democracy as he kicks off African tour

On first Africa trip, Blinken confronts questions of US leverage in deepening crises
: WP reports the US secretary of state expressed concern about “escalating violence” in Ethiopia, among other issues.

Blinken urges end to Ethiopian civil war on Africa trip: WSJ reports Secretary of State Antony Blinken warned that the civil war in Ethiopia was risking the stability of Africa’s second-most populous nation, and said that regional allies such as Kenya were critical to ending the conflict and other regional crises.

Mass detentions of civilians fan ‘climate of fear’ in Ethiopia: NYT reports an ethnically-motivated detention campaign largely targeting Ethiopians of Tigrayan descent threatens to further unravel Africa’s second-most populous country a year into a civil war.

Gadhafi's son returns to Libyan politics: Can he win? DW reports after years in hiding, Seif al-Islam, the son of former dictator Moammar Gadhafi, will run for president in upcoming Libyan elections. Experts believe his return complicates things even further in the unstable nation.

India closes coal-fired plants as New Delhi is smothered in toxic smog: FT reports schools have shut and construction work banned in the city and the surrounding region that are choking on pollution.

Bloomberg: Global wealth surges as China overtakes US to grab top spot

+ World’s net worth tripled in last two decades, McKinsey says

+ Housing boom is key driver, could bring unwanted side effects


Germany's Merkel warns against Europe 'decoupling' from China: German Chancellor Angela Merkel has said Europe should not cut off cooperation on research and development with China. However, protecting intellectual property remains an important challenge.
DW

Germany may have been naive on China at first, Merkel says
Reuters

Singapore PM warns of US-China ‘mishap’ over Taiwan: SCMP reports Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loong said heightened tensions were unlikely to lead to ‘war overnight’, but a ‘miscalculation’ over the island could still occur.

Analysis: Xi's need to overtake Deng poses big risk for Taiwan: Unification would cement his legacy. Does he have a timeline?
Nikkei

Biden’s Taiwan gaffes risk real-world consequences
Bloomberg

Biden maneuvers to avoid the unintended conflict with China
David Ignatius

Easing US-China tensions requires more dialogue: Virtual summit between Joe Biden and Xi Jinping should be the first of many.
FT - Editorial

Do we want a ‘thaw’ with China? Yes — and no.
WP - Editorial

So long, Hong Kong: Asia's business hub loses its luster: The city's rigid quarantine rules appease the mainland but risk alienating foreign bankers.
Nikkei

WTA says it is still unable to locate Chinese tennis star Peng Shuai: FT reports the player has not been seen since sexual assault allegations against government officials surfaced.

WP: North Korea’s Kim appears after month-long absence, visiting ‘utopia’ city created to cement regime’s legacy

Japan to unleash $350bn stimulus as west unwinds state spending
: FT reports checks will be sent to families but economists warn it will not lift consumption and inflation.

COVID

Berlin tightens COVID-19 rules for unvaccinated: DW reports ahead of talks between caretaker Chancellor Angela Merkel and state premiers, some of Germany's 16 states have already tightened rules. In Berlin, the so-called 2G rule is off to a bumpy start.

+ Fourth wave hitting Germany with ‘full force’, Merkel warns

+ Belgium mandates working from home


White House plans major expansion of COVID vaccine production: NYT reports the Biden administration will spend billions of dollars on a new plan to combat the pandemic, investing in antiviral pills, rapid tests, and manufacturing.

During pandemic’s first year, Americans moved at the lowest rate in over 70 years, census data shows: WP reports last year's rate was the lowest since records started being kept in the 1940s, suggesting the country’s longterm downward trend was not interrupted by the coronavirus pandemic.

POLITICS + CAMPAIGNS

Pain at the pump drives Biden’s suffering in the polls: Politico reports consumer sentiment has plunged in recent weeks as inflation climbed to the highest levels in more than a generation.

Biden demands probe of ‘potentially illegal conduct’ in oil sector: FT reports the president singles out ExxonMobil and Chevron in a letter to FTC as US gasoline prices soar.

Reuters: US asks Japan, China, others to consider tapping oil reserves - sources

Bloomberg: Biden takes GM’s electric Hummer for test drive: ‘I’m an automobile guy’

DFP: Biden raves about Hummer, talks up infrastructure win in Detroit visit

Biden lauds electric cars in Michigan as climate agenda hits road bumps in Washington
: WP reports President Biden traveled to Detroit to promote American-made electric vehicles and a new infrastructure package at a time when the rest of his climate agenda hangs in the balance back in Washington.

Politico: Psaki says Harris faces more criticism because she is a woman and woman of color

The collapse of Kamala Harris

Charles Cooke

Democrats shouldn’t panic. They should go into shock.
Thomas B. Edsall

Democrats face a 2022 superstorm
Philip Bump

'This experience broke a lot of people': Inside State amid the Afghanistan withdrawal: The chaos that came with ending America's longest war extended to Foggy Bottom, where the staff was left with psychological scars.
Politico

+ The Senate confirmed Jonathan Kanter, a critic of Big Tech, as the head of the Justice Department’s antitrust division.

Lina Khan sees turbulent start as head of Federal Trade Commission: Criticized by Republicans, Khan tells agency staffers she aims to build bridges going forward.
WSJ

GOP can't escape 'self-inflicted injuries' as they fight to reclaim House: Politico reports the drama over Rep. Paul Gosar's violent anime video and the 13 Republicans who voted for the infrastructure bill are the latest episodes in a long line of personality-driven GOP crises.

+ Media baron Rupert Murdoch told Donald Trump that he needed to leave the past behind and focus on the future to address problems the country faces.

Senate poised to advance defense bill after Schumer, Pelosi reach deal on China legislation: Politico reports the agreement comes after Senate Republicans and some House Democrats objected to Schumer’s push to unilaterally attach the China legislation to the must-pass defense bill.

Vinoda Basnayake is a Beltway whisperer for Middle Eastern royalty—and the operator of DC’s sceniest nightlife spots: He’s our town’s hookup to all kinds of big-name celebs, but also a super-wired foreign lobbyist. The two lives aren’t as different as you might think.
Washingtonian

An estimated 100,306 people in the United States died from a drug overdose in a 12-month period ending April 2021, according to new provisional data released by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention Wednesday.

DISRUPTION + INNOVATION

Designing transport for humans, not econs
Pete Dyson + Rory Sutherland

COMMERCE

The Great Resignation: How Maslow’s ‘hierarchy of needs’ could be the key to stopping employees from quitting: Workplaces may be losing employees by failing to understand their priorities, values, and need for belonging, recent research from EY says.
Fortune

‘It’s the biggest open secret out there’: The double lives of white-collar workers with two jobs: Remote working has made it easier than ever for staff to moonlight. But how do they cope with clashing meetings and two bosses? And can the rewards be worth the lies?
Guardian

Is your company secretly monitoring your work at home? Since COVID, the practice has surged
LAT

Investors hung their hats on Peloton and Zoom last year. What now? Some “stay-at-home” stocks that were pandemic-era darlings have experienced brutal sell-offs.
NYT

Peloton said that it would raise $1 billion in cash from selling stock, just weeks after it said it didn’t need more capital. The company’s stock is down more than 60 percent this year.

Zoom is down nearly 25 percent this year.

Investors are now piling into “reopen stocks”: Shares of Live Nation, for instance, are 50 percent higher than at any time before the pandemic, although sales remain less than half what they were in 2019.

In praise of . . . Enron? Twenty years have passed since the notoriously corrupt energy-trading company collapsed. Maybe it’s time to acknowledge that it wasn’t all bad for Texas.
Texas Monthly

Best books of 2021: Economics
FT

What went wrong with Zillow? A real-estate algorithm derailed its big bet: The company had staked its future growth on its digital home-flipping business, but getting the algorithm right proved difficult.
WSJ

Amazon is considering shifting its popular co-brand credit card to Mastercard amid simmering tensions with Visa, a feud that already prompted the retailer to ban the payment giant’s cards in the UK starting next year.

Amazon’s fight with Visa is bigger than Britain: This feud started small, but it ultimately threatens MasterCard, too. The power of both credit card networks is starting to crumble.
Paul J. Davies

Apple performs U-turn on right to repair iPhones and Macs: FT reports the tech group will allow customers to purchase its components to fix devices themselves.

UPS adds Waymo as second partner to test autonomous big rigs: Bloomberg reports the delivery company is expanding an existing partnership with the self-driving vehicle company to test delivery routes between Dallas and Houston.

American Airlines, travel platform Winding Tree announce blockchain partnership: Reuters reports American Airlines and Swiss travel platform Winding Tree said on Tuesday they have formed a partnership that will enable corporate buyers to access the US airline's data on flights directly, without the need for intermediaries.

How Gary Vaynerchuk became an NFT guru and lord of his own metaverse
Benjamin Wallace

+ A Canadian teenager was arrested for allegedly stealing C$46 million ($36.5 million) worth of cryptocurrency from a US victim, the biggest crypto theft reported from one person, according to police in the city of Hamilton, near Toronto.

+ The baseball star Shohei Ohtani will invest in the crypto exchange FTX.


Staples Center in Los Angeles to be renamed Crypto.com Arena: FT reports the deal worth $700m to rebrand 20,000-seat venue comes as digital coins gain wider acceptance.

The home is the future of travel: The CEO of Airbnb thinks the lines separating life, work, and vacations will keep getting blurrier.
Derek Thompson

MARKETING + COMMUNICATIONS

Time to save the internet: After lurching from naive optimism to despairing dystopian, is the internet now entering a ‘third stage’ of civic-minded realism?
FT

SPACE + SCIENCE

Why scientists have spent years mapping this creature’s brain: An enormous new analysis of the wiring of the fruit fly brain is a milestone for the young field of modern connectomics, researchers say.
NYT

PERFORMANCE

Fake experts abound. Here’s how to find (and be) a real one.
Carl Richards

CULTURE

Go West young ski bum: The broken American idea of living the dream: Heather Hansman on trying to find a life in a Colorado ski town.
Literary Hub

Why Skyfall is a masterclass in cinematography
Kay Clay

The one that got away: Cleveland bank heist mystery solved after 52 years: Thomas Randele lived quietly in the suburbs. Now authorities say he was Theodore Conrad who walked away with a fortune in 1969.
Guardian

SPORT

Kevin Durant can score from anywhere. Defenses don’t know what to do. The midrange game has largely fallen out of favor in the NBA, but not when Durant is on the court.
NYT

Mino Raiola's rise from pizzeria worker to becoming a football super-agent: Mino Raiola continues to play kingmaker in some of football's biggest transfers but where did it begin for this super-agent and why does he have the trust of the biggest names? A look at his early years, with input from those who were there, helps to explain.
Sky Sports

An indigenous women’s softball team beats opponents, and machismo: A Mayan team from a small community on the Yucatán Peninsula has caused a sensation by excelling as its athletes play barefoot and wear traditional dresses, breaking barriers with every game.
NYT

Pittsburgh Penguins valued at more than $850m in Fenway Sports deal: FT reports the owner of Liverpool FC and Red Sox looks to expand into professional hockey with the purchase of the storied team.

Enjoy the ride + plan accordingly.

-Marc

Curation and commentary by Marc A. Ross | Founder @ Brigadoon

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