DON'T BREATHE
Delhi’s air is so toxic that schools are closing, expats are fleeing, and the visiting UK PM could lose hours from her life
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An international conference on tobacco control converges on Delhi. The World Health Organization is bringing together delegates from roughly 180 countries for its biennial meeting to discuss global efforts to curb tobacco use. Somewhat ironically they’ll contend with staggering levels of air pollution. Pakistan has said it will not attend, given the current strain in its diplomatic relations with India.
Theresa May is in India, too. The UK prime minister will join India PM Narendra Modi at the India UK Tech Summit, a three-day conference covering technology, higher education, intellectual property, and design. It’s Britain’s first big, overseas trade mission since the vote for Brexit.
Softer results at SoftBank. After the market closes in Japan, the telecom giant is expected to announce (paywall) a 12% drop in fiscal second-quarter operating profit. Mostly, investors will be waiting to hear what CEO Masayoshi Son has to say about the state of his company’s big acquisitions, including Sprint and ARM Holdings.
And more earnings elsewhere. HSBC and Nissan Motor are among the big corporates on the earnings calendar today.
The FBI confirmed (again) that Hillary Clinton’s emails are fine. Director James Comey informed Congress that “based on our review, we have not changed our conclusions that we expressed in July,” when it said criminal prosecution was not warranted. Asian markets opened higher on the news.
Beijing ruled against pro-independence lawmakers-in-waiting in Hong Kong. After a night of violent protests in Hong Kong, China’s highest legislative body effectively blocked two lawmakers-elect, saying they would not be allowed to retake the oaths they improperly modified on the first try. The ruling leaves two seats vacant in Hong Kong’s Legislative Council.
Samsung tried to move on. The Korean electronics maker, still smarting from the debacle over its exploding Galaxy Note 7 smartphones, is already laying plans for the Galaxy S8. On Sunday a Samsung executive promised the new model will include artificial-intelligence features that are “significantly differentiated” from the competition. Meanwhile the company was hit with another safety recall, this time for washing machines.
Volkswagen’s chairman got pulled into the diesel-emissions probe. German prosecutors have widened their investigation to include Hans Dieter Pötsch, who was made chairman in the wake of the emissions scandal, having previously served as finance chief. Investigators are determining whether management adequately informed investors about the scandal as it was unearthed by US officials.
Take part in the political chatter. On Nov. 8, election day in the United States, we’re inviting our readers around the world to join Quartz reporters and editors for a discussion of US politics. It will be hosted all day long on Slack, the the group messaging tool. Click here to participate.
Devjyot Ghoshal on how Myanmar is faring under the leadership of Aung San Suu Kyi. “There are some promising signs, but only a diehard optimist could pretend it’s going well for Suu Kyi so far, a year after the elections, and six months after the 1991 Nobel Peace Prize winner formed her government. To be fair, transforming the world’s youngest democracy is a huge task.” Read more here.
Philosophers are failing to engage in public discourse. It wasn’t always this way.
There’s a role for religion in the hospital ward. It can be a comfort when doctors pray for their patients.
Every nation has a shadow in the Jungian sense. When we avert our eyes from the negative aspects of society, we do ourselves a disservice.
Kinky sex can enhance creativity. The exhilarating high lifts our consciousness into a heightened state of “flow.”
We’re just a century away from Christmas in July. Quartz’s Christmas Creep calculator, based on when the holiday lights on Oxford Street in London get turned on, is now updated with 2016 data.
Wikipedia is way less biased than it used to be. Researchers from Harvard find it filled with neutrality.
Cows can now text their owners when they’re sick or pregnant. The messages are generated by sensors inserted in the cows’ stomachs.
The legalese associated with Apple product ownership can involve more words than The Hobbit. If you own a Mac, an iPhone, an Apple TV, an Apple Watch, and an Airport router, you’ve probably agreed to at least 100,000 words of legal contracts.
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