Concentration Camps, Drinkable Pot, Amy Klobuchar, Airbnb, Madeleine Albright

Marc Ross Daily February.png

Concentration Camps, Drinkable Pot, Amy Klobuchar, Airbnb, Madeleine Albright

Marc Ross Daily
February 11, 2019
Curation and commentary from 
Marc A. Ross

Reporting from Alexandria, Virginia 

Marc Ross Daily  = News + Analysis at the Intersection of Globalization + Disruption + Politics


TOP FIVE

✔️ Turkey tells China to close Muslim 'concentration camps'

✔️ Xi to Mar-a-Lago in March?

✔️ Scientists race to make pot like booze — drinkable

✔️ Airbnb hires airline industry veteran for transport push

✔️ Madeleine Albright on diplomacy and dining
 

GLOBALIZATION

Turkey urges China to close mass internment camps: Ankara calls detention policy a ‘great shame for humanity’ in an unusually bold statement.

DW: Turkey tells China to close Muslim 'concentration camps'

CBC: US ambassador to Canada calls on China to release Canadians from 'unlawful' detention


Arrests of Michael Kovrig and Michael Spavor 'unacceptable,' says Kelly Craft.

China in Greenland: The Pentagon raised an alarm last year over what its officials deemed a troubling development in Greenland: China was looking to bankroll and build three airports that could give it a military foothold off Canada’s coast. 

UK sends an aircraft carrier to Pacific in a show of strength to China: The Times reports, Britain’s new aircraft carrier will be sent to China’s backyard in a show of strength as President Xi’s government increasingly disputes Pacific waters. 

London won the race for the renminbi: The city’s charm offensive has paid off, with daily orders averaging $73bn in October.

US-China trade talks: USTR Robert Lighthizer and Treasury secretary Steven Mnuchin will head to Beijing on Monday for the latest round of talks.

Xi to Mar-a-Lago? Axios reports, Xi may soon come to Mar-a-Lago. Trump's advisers have informally discussed holding a summit there next month with Xi Jinping to try to end the US-China trade war, according to two administration officials with direct knowledge of the internal discussions. 

Hard Brexit risks 100,000 German jobs: A study has shown that Germany stands to lose the greatest number of jobs if Britain exits the EU without a deal. Some of the country's well-known auto and tech hubs are likely to be the worst hit.

FT - Editorial: Businesses desperately need clarity over Brexit: Theresa May’s government has failed to provide certainty for employers.

US companies warn investors of mounting Brexit risks: Threat of disorderly exit from EU prompts growing alarm in American boardrooms.

Petros Sekeris: Game theory says Brexit negotiations are now all about avoiding blame: The UK and the EU are continuing Brexit talks because, as game theory suggests, both sides want to avoid being blamed for the fallout.

Sajid Javid: ‘I’ve never called myself The Saj’: FT reports, he is a multimillionaire who took a steep pay cut from his job at Deutsche Bank to go into politics, yet the man hoping to walk through the door of Number 10 has a surprising confession to make. “It would probably sound strange sitting here as home secretary that you sometimes feel a little bit like an outsider, but I guess it is a bit like that still.”

Inside Germany's new spy HQ: The German Intelligence Agency (BND) has relocated to its massive new base in the capital after decades in provincial Pullach. The move is hugely symbolic for a country long skeptical of spy agencies.

The limestone and aluminum-fronted complex covers 10 hectares (25 acres) and cost €1.1 billion ($1.25 billion). It is one of the world's largest secret service bases.

Munich Security Conference: Angela Merkel, German chancellor, and US secretary of state Mike Pompeo are due to speak, but French president Emmanuel Macron is notably absent from the schedule, underlining that France finds itself rather isolated in its relationships with Germany and Italy.

Pompeo trip marks US re-engagement with long-overlooked central Europe: Reuters reports, when Secretary of State Mike Pompeo visits Hungary, Slovakia, and Poland this week he wants to make up for a lack of US engagement that opened the door to more Chinese and Russian influence in central Europe.

Brazil economy minister vows sweeping reforms: Paulo Guedes promises pension and tax changes and to push through privatizations.

OTD: In 1990 Nelson Mandela was released from prison in South Africa after 27 years in captivity.

DISRUPTION

Scientists race to make pot like booze — drinkable: Bloomberg reports, the market potential has attracted several big alcohol companies that are seeking to offset declining beer consumption with the next big thing. The best-known partnership is Constellation Brands Inc.’s 38% stake in Canopy Growth Corp., the largest cannabis firm by market value, for which it paid about $4 billion. Budweiser brewer Anheuser-Busch InBev NV formed a research partnership with Tilray Inc., with each company investing up to $50 million in the venture, and Molson Coors Brewing Co. has teamed up with Quebec-based Hexo Corp.

Amanda Feilding: ‘LSD can get deep down and reset the brain – like shaking up a snow globe’: The campaign to legalise LSD in Britain is gathering pace. The force behind the movement is an English countess for whom lobbying – and experimenting – has been a life’s work.

The first hyperloop for cargo will be in India: DP World, UAE's state-owned port operator, signed a partnership with Virgin Hyperloop One to develop a cargo transporter. 

POLITICS

Shutdown looms: Negotiations over a bipartisan deal for border-security funding have stalled, aides familiar with the talks and other officials said, raising the specter of another government shutdown at the end of this week.

FT: Talks to avoid second US shutdown are deadlocked

WP: Talks to avert shutdown collapse over immigration enforcement


Today: Trump holds a campaign rally in El Paso, Texas.

Election 2020: Sen. Amy Klobuchar (D-MN) launches her presidential campaign.

Klobuchar is the fifth woman in Congress to announce her candidacy for the Democratic nomination.

I have Klobuchar as a second tier candidate - with a good fundrasing report she could make the first tier in the coming months. 


LAT: Sen. Amy Klobuchar offers Democrats a Midwestern road to the White House

WSJ: Impeachment plan for Fairfax drafted in Virginia


Hold the line on China: The Senate Small Business Committee, which Sen. Marco Rubio (R-FL) chairs, will release a report on Tuesday "laying out the challenges with China’s campaign of industrial espionage and coercion," according to a source with direct knowledge.

Trade Works for America: The group aims to spend more than $10 million pushing members of Congress to support USMCA. Republicans and industry groups are starting to panic about Trump's NAFTA replacement bill, USMCA.

THOUGHT LEADER TACTIC OF THE DAY

Execute a twelve-month blog post scheme that involves owned and earned media.

COMMERCE

Airbnb hires airline industry veteran for transport push: Fred Reid tapped to help the start-up build ‘seamless’ travel services.

Uber and Airbnb are in a race to provide end to end travel and logistics services.

Reuters: Paris seeks $14 million from Airbnb for illegal adverts

Niall Ferguson
 joins blockchain project Ampleforth.

"I’m attracted by Ampleforth's mission to reinvent money in a way that protects individual freedom and to create a payments system that treats everyone equally."

Roger McNamee: Not taking responsibility has been central to the culture of Silicon Valley since just after the turn of the millennium: When thought leadership passed from traditional venture capitalists to the “PayPal Mafia”, visionary alumni of the payments start-up led by Peter Thiel, Elon Musk and Reid Hoffman. The PayPal Mafia were among the first to recognize the shift from a web of pages to a web of people, and their investments and insights propelled the social network generation to success. 

Pirelli’s Tronchetti Provera: A contrarian view on dealmaking: Tyremaker’s top boss is willing to ‘go it alone’ in his business transactions. https://on.ft.com/2SoD0i9

Tom Braithwaite: Tech titans try to dazzle with jargon, but just lack substance: Earnings season saw Silicon Valley resort to an obscure performance without any meaningful numbers.

Silicon Valley is supposed to like big data. It is time to provide it.

CNBC: Google's top policy chief calls for 'common rules of the road' globally for tech regulation 

CULTURE

Madeleine Albright on diplomacy and dining: The US’s first female secretary of state on entertaining foreign leaders in her Washington home. https://on.ft.com/2DxaReO

@ThatEricAlper: Fun fact: Elvis never performed a single encore, so when he left, he wasn't coming back. Hence the phrase, "Elvis has left the building."

BAFTA Awards: 'The Favourite' dominates with 7 wins, but 'Roma' claims top prize.

Grammy Awards:

Kacey Musgrave is the winner of the album of the year Grammy Award, the night's top honor. Musgraves won for "Golden Hour," which won earlier in the night for best country album.

Childish Gambino's "This Is America" won the Grammy Award for record of the year. Gambino is the alter ego of singer-actor Donald Glover

Dua Lipa is the winner of the best new artist Grammy Award.

Cardi B has made history as the first woman to win the Grammy Award for best rap album.

H.E.R. is the winner of the best R&B album for her self-titled album.

Pop quiz: What was the top Super Bowl 2018 ad according to USA Today’s Ad Meter?

Ross Rant March 2018.png

Heck, if you can name one of the top ten, I will give you bonus points.

The reason you can’t remember the best ad or any ads from the big game, it’s not the best tool.

It’s not the best tool because it doesn’t connect, make an impact, or leave a mark. 

Surprise beats consistency. 

Emotion beats fact.

Funny beats dour.

Useful beats sales. 

Beautiful beats boring. 

Inspirational beats directional.

The best communicators have always understood this instinctively.

By the way, USA Today’s Ad Meter ranked Amazon's "Alexa Loses Her Voice" as the best 2018 ad.

I don't remember the ad either.

But I do remember my friends telling me a story or two about Alexa that used funny, useful, beautiful, and inspiring words to describe their experiences.

-Marc

Marc A. Ross is the founder of Caracal Global and specializes in thought leader communications and global public affairs for senior executives working at the intersection of globalization, disruption, and politics.

Year of the Pig, SOTU, World Bank, Oprah, Spotify, Premier League

Caracal Global Daily January.png

Year of the Pig, SOTU, World Bank, Oprah, Spotify, Premier League

Caracal Global Daily
February 5, 2019
Curation and commentary from 
Marc A. Ross

Reporting from Alexandria, Virginia 

Caracal Global Daily  = News + Analysis at the Intersection of Globalization + Disruption + Politics


TOP FIVE

✔️ Trump will nominate David Malpass for World Bank

✔️ Europe split over how to respond to the rise of China

✔️ Leasing IKEA furniture?

✔️ Can Oprah help restore the Beto O’Rourke glow?

✔️ Spotify is looking to splurge on podcasts

ROSS RANT

Pop quiz: What was the top Super Bowl 2018 ad according to USA Today’s Ad Meter?

Heck, if you can name one of the top ten, I will give you bonus points.

The reason you can’t remember the best ad or any ads from the big game, it’s not the best tool.

It’s not the best tool because it doesn’t connect, make an impact, or leave a mark. 

Surprise beats consistency. 

Emotion beats fact.

Funny beats dour.

Useful beats sales. 

Beautiful beats boring. 

Inspirational beats directional.

The best communicators have always understood this instinctively.

By the way, USA Today’s Ad Meter ranked Amazon's "Alexa Loses Her Voice" as the best 2018 ad.

I don't remember the ad either.

But I do remember my friends telling me a story or two about Alexa that used funny, useful, beautiful, and inspiring words to describe their experiences.
 

GLOBALIZATION

World Bank: Trump will nominate David Malpass, current undersecretary for international affairs at the US Department of Treasury and one of the World Bank’s sharpest critics within his administration, to be the next leader of the World Bank.

FT: Trump’s likely World Bank pick is wary of globalism

The US has traditionally picked the World Bank’s president, with the Europeans picking the IMF leader.

The final decision to appoint the president rests with the World Bank’s board of executive directors, which will begin considering nominations on Thursday.


Ottawa was the setting for an emergency meeting of the Lima Group yesterday: The 14 members include Canada, Argentina, Brazil, Colombia, and others. They are trying to figure out what to do about Venezuela. The group agrees the leader, Nicolas Maduro, must go, and fresh elections should be held under an administration headed by an interim president, Juan Guaido.

Venezuela’s collapse is sparking concern on the international left.

India to outpace China in increasing oil demand: New Delhi says it will keep importing Iranian oil despite looming US sanctions.

Europe split over how to respond to rise of China: FT reports, decision to veto Siemens-Alstom tie-up could see revamp of competition policy.

Calais, the gateway to France and beyond, could be paralyzed by a ‘hard’ Brexit: LAT reports, Calais is Britain’s gateway to continental Europe: 10 million passengers, 2 million trucks and 1.8 million cars pass through the French port each year by ferry. An additional 1.7 million trucks carrying 22 million tons of goods are transported by train on the Eurotunnel Shuttle between Calais and the British port of Folkestone.

Brexit: Theresa May is "determined" to deliver Brexit "on time," on March 29, despite ministers in her own Cabinet suggesting a delay could be needed to push related legislation through the U.K. House of Commons. 

Chinese welcome Lunar Year of the Pig: The most important holiday of the year involves a fortnight of festivities.

@MKorostikov: So at the end of February we'll probably have @realDonaldTrump, Kim Jong Un, Xi Jinping and Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov visiting Vietnam.  

DISRUPTION

Smart footwear: Alphabet's life sciences arm, Verily, has been looking for partners to co-develop shoes with embedded sensors to monitor the wearer's movement and weight, as well as to measure falls,

Leasing IKEA furniture? IKEA CEO Torbjorn Loof told the Financial Times that the company would "work together with partners so you can actually lease your furniture. When that leasing period is over, you hand it back and you might lease something else… Instead of throwing those away, we refurbish them a little and we could sell them, prolonging the lifecycle of the products."

Inside an otherworldly mission to prepare humans for Mars: Braving deep isolation and sweaty spacesuits, six "analog astronauts" tested their tools, talents, and grit on a mock trip to the red planet. https://on.natgeo.com/2UEs7Wo

Among troops, vaping is now more popular than cigarettes: Military Times reports, vaping now appears to be more common in the military than smoking regular cigarettes. 

An asteroid could destroy humanity like it did dinosaurs. A Hopkins team has a plan to save the world: WP reports, the research team at the Johns Hopkins University Applied Physics Laboratory in Laurel plans to launch a spacecraft, speed it up really fast and smash it into an asteroid.

Crypto CEO dies with only passwords to unlock millions: FR reports, digital-asset exchange Quadriga CX has a $200 million problem with no obvious solution.

Time suck: The average American loses 42 hours stuck in traffic each year.

POLITICS

Send the documents: Trump inaugural committee is subpoenaed over donors and spending. Federal prosecutors are showing interest in whether it received illegal foreign donations.

The committee raised over $100 million.

SOTU: The White House is spinning that Trump will use his State of the Union address tonight to call for bipartisanship. 

In State of the Union, Trump to call for ‘comity,’ but rivals scoff: WP reports, aides said Trump will make a sincere appeal to broaden his coalition even as critics cast such rhetoric from Trump as “inauthentic and unpersuasive.”

Joe Scarborough: Trump’s State of the Union will be delivered against a grim political backdrop

SOTU @ 9:10 pm ET

Interior: Trump said he would nominate former oil-and-gas industry lobbyist David Bernhardt as secretary of the Interior.

WSJ - Editorial: Trump’s re-election challenge: Down in the polls, he needs a strong economy to have any chance to win a second term.

The top 1% of NY state residents account for 46% of state income tax paid by NY residents.

Can Oprah help restore the Beto O’Rourke glow? LAT reports, the former Texas congressman’s conversation Tuesday with Oprah Winfrey is among the most highly anticipated political events of this nascent presidential cycle. The appearance with Winfrey in Times Square’s PlayStation Theater, scheduled to be aired later this month, will be relatively brief, as she’s interviewing several others in this round of her “SuperSoul Conversations,” the congressman being the only politician.

Rep. John Delaney (D-MD) announced his presidential candidacy way back in July 2017 - and it hasn't made a difference.

Bloomberg: Trade hawks quietly bristle as Trump’s China deadline approaches: Fears that Trump may fall for empty promises by Chinese.

The great corn syrup war of 2019 continues!

@MillerCoors: At MillerCoors, we're proud of our high-quality, great-tasting beers. We're also proud that none of our products include any high fructose corn syrup, while a number of Anheuser-Busch products do. And Miller Lite has fewer calories, fewer carbs and more taste than Bud Light. 


THOUGHT LEADER TACTIC OF THE DAY

Respond to ten social media updates and thoughts daily - don't just scroll.

COMMERCE

Spotify is looking to splurge on podcasts: According to Recode and the WSJ, the music streaming giant is currently in talks to acquire Gimlet Media for over $200M, marking the first time Spotify has purchased another company.

General Motors said it's in talks to invest about $2.73 billion in Brazil from 2020 to 2024.

Tesla to buy battery technology group Maxwell for $218m.

Nissan-Renault alliance to tie up with Google on self-driving cars.

JPMorgan plans to take on rivals PayPal and Stripe.

Huawei warns Australians to face higher 5G prices after a ban.

Chinese toymakers shift overseas as trade war bites: China produces 80% of the world's toys, and the US is its largest customer. Many Chinese toymakers are accelerating their overseas relocation efforts - most popular choice has been Vietnam.

CULTURE

Harvard’s top astronomer says an alien ship may be among us. He doesn’t care what his colleagues say: WP reports, ever since Avi Loeb’s controversial paper about the object, dubbed ‘Oumuamua, he has become a spokesman for the possibilities of extraterrestrial life.

SPORT

Super Bowl audience: The game drew 100 million viewers, but the contest was lowest-scoring Super Bowl in history.

Patriots players waste no time saying they won’t visit White House after Super Bowl win: WP reports, a trio of defensive backs began the now-annual tradition of spurning a champions’ visit hosted by Trump.

Today is the second championship parade in Boston in 100 days.

Ronaldo effect: Cristiano Ronaldo's move from Real Madrid has seen Juventus's popularity rocket in China, up nearly 70 percent by one measure.

Premier League now a three-way title race? Liverpool's lead at the top of the Premier League has been whittled down to three points over Manchester City and five points over Tottenham.