Sunday, July 4, 2021

Your Weekend Briefing

Fourth of July, Florida Condo Collapse, Stanley Cup

By Whet Moser

Welcome to the Weekend Briefing. We're covering the Fourth of July, the latest on the Florida building collapse and the Stanley Cup.

Ridge Vanderhoff, 4, his sister Louise, 2, and their father, Michael, attended a Fourth of July parade in Cumming, Ga., on Saturday.Shannon Stapleton/Reuters

1. Americans are returning to their rituals for July 4 as Covid-19 cases hold steady.

New cases are at 12,000 a day, the lowest since testing became widely available. The average of fewer than 300 daily deaths is a decline of 23 percent over the past two weeks. Americans are riding a wave of optimism: Travel is expected to be up 40 percent over last year. The number of airline passengers is expected to be up 164 percent.

For parents whose children are too young to be vaccinated, the holiday is trickier. Here's some perspective, and some basic advice.

President Biden has invited 1,000 military personnel and essential workers to an Independence Day bash on the South Lawn of the White House. But public health experts fear the gathering will send the wrong message as wide swaths of the population remain vulnerable.

In the bigger picture, some Americans are considering, or reconsidering, what the flag means to them.

The authorities announced plans on Saturday to demolish the remainder of Champlain Towers South before Tropical Storm Elsa's arrival.Angel Valentin for The New York Times

2. Florida officials are rushing to demolish what remains of Champlain Towers South.

Worried that Tropical Storm Elsa could topple the partially collapsed structure, Mayor Charles Burkett of Surfside said demolition could begin as early as Sunday. The demolition would cause "the most minimal interruption" of search and rescue work, officials said.

In the wake of the collapse, engineers have been struck by a possible flaw in the building's construction: Critical places near its base appeared to have less steel reinforcement than called for in the project's original design drawings.

The bodies of six more victims were found on Friday, bringing the total to 24. As many as 124 people are still unaccounted for. Tumultuous conflict over how the building was run was an open secret in the years leading to its collapse.

An Afghan soldier at Bagram Air Base.Mohammad Ismail/Reuters

3. U.S. combat troops are out of Afghanistan. But the White House is trying to convince Afghans that the U.S. is not abandoning the country.

The military will help Afghan forces by teleconference. Armed Air Force drones will hunt terrorists from bases eight hours away. The Biden administration still plans to provide the Afghan government more than $3 billion in security assistance.

In reality, much has changed. The U.S. departure from Bagram Air Base in Afghanistan this past week was marked by little fanfare, and the new tenants are the Afghan security forces. The physical objects left behind are reminders of decades of loss.

Intelligence analysts estimate that Kabul could fall to the Taliban in as little as six months.

The Coop supermarket chain in Sweden was the victim of an cyberattack.Nicklas Andersson/Avanza

4. Hundreds of businesses around the world were hit by a cyberattack.

One of Sweden's largest grocery chains, Coop, had to close at least 800 stores on Saturday. A Swedish railroad and a major pharmacy chain were also hit, according to a cybersecurity researcher. Some of the affected companies were asked for $5 million in ransom.

Security researchers said the attack might have been carried out by REvil, a Russian cybercriminal group that the F.B.I. has said was behind the hacking of JBS, the world's largest meat processor, in May. The attack targeted a software provider, Kaseya, which provides services to more than 40,000 organizations.

At a congressional hearing in May, the chief executives of Wall Street's six largest banks said the greatest threat to their companies and the wider financial system was cybersecurity. The Times's DealBook newsletter examines the risks of such an attack.

Protesters calling for the ouster of Brazilian president Jair Bolsonaro clash with police in São Paulo.Victor Moriyama for The New York Times

5. Brazilians are protesting President Jair Bolsonaro over a vaccine scandal.

The attorney general's office has opened an investigation into Bolsonaro's role in a corruption scheme in which health ministry officials solicited bribes from vaccine dealers. The outrage drew tens of thousands of Brazilians to the streets in several cities on Saturday, the third large wave of demonstrations in recent weeks.

The inquiry is likely to pose a major threat to Bolsonaro's re-election bid next year, and perhaps even his ability to serve out the remainder of his term.

In the U.K., Prime Minister Boris Johnson seems convinced that a high vaccination rate has broken the link between cases and hospitalizations and is gambling on reopening.

I want to thank you for spending time with The Morning today. Subscribers to The New York Times make this newsletter possible, and I hope you'll consider becoming one of them. You can do so here.

Allen Weisselberg, center, at the Manhattan district attorney's office.Jefferson Siegel for The New York Times

6. In the case against Donald Trump's company, there are echoes of his father.

The details of the charges brought by a grand jury against the Trump Organization and its chief financial officer, Allen Weisselberg, have a rather low-rent feel that one might associate with a scrappy real-estate operation.

Weisselberg is accused of receiving $1.76 million in tax-free benefits over 15 years, doled out in a strikingly small-bore and incremental way. The alleged scheme resembles an updated version of Fred Trump's $16,135 boilers, which he bought from himself for his apartment buildings in the 1990s, inflating the bill and skimming off the extra money for his children to avoid gift and inheritance taxes.

Luo Huazhong taking a break in Jiande, China.Qilai Shen for The New York Times

7. Chinese millennials are chilling. Beijing isn't happy.

Five years ago, Luo Huazhong quit his job in a factory, biked 1,300 miles to Tibet and started working odd jobs. He called his new lifestyle "lying flat," or tangping in Mandarin. His blog post about it, "Lying Flat Is Justice," went viral and became a broader statement about Chinese society for millennials who are defying the country's prosperity narrative by refusing to participate in it: forgoing marriage, children, jobs, houses and cars.

The ruling Communist Party has targeted the idea as a threat to stability. The authorities barred posts on a tangping forum with more than 200,000 members and required e-commerce platforms to stop selling clothes, phone cases and other merchandise branded with "tangping."

Tyler Johnson scoring for the Tampa Bay Lightning during Game 3 of the Stanley Cup Final on Friday.Minas Panagiotakis/Getty Images

8. The Tampa Bay Lightning are one game away from a sweep — and a second straight N.H.L. championship.

The most scrutinized position in sports might be the starting goaltender in Montreal: Jacques Plante, Ken Dryden, Patrick Roy and now Carey Price. He waited 14 years for his first finals appearance, but in a possible passing of the torch, he has been outplayed by his Lightning counterpart, Andrei Vasilevskiy. Game 4 is Monday night.

With a week left at Wimbledon, all eyes are on the top-seeded woman, Ashleigh Barty. She's the one in the scalloped hemline — a tribute to Evonne Goolagong Cawley, who won Wimbledon 50 years ago and, like Barty, is of Indigenous Australian ancestry. In the tournament's final week, enjoy the squash shots: Roger Federer's gift to tennis, spectacular to watch and fun to hit.

Christopher Simpson for The New York Times. Food Stylist: Simon Andrews.

9. Chill with some salad.

The hot grill gets all the attention on the Fourth, but as summer trudges on, cooling salads offer a reprieve. The most popular recipe from the Times Cooking offers this week was a cold noodle salad with spicy peanut sauce, and we have three more suggestions.

If you want to skip the grill altogether, sheet-pan chicken with zucchini and basil is a savory, summery dinner. For more seasonal tastes, here's a July menu to celebrate summer's bounty, and a lesson in rosé from the dark side.

Bruce Springsteen in "Springsteen on Broadway."Sara Krulwich/The New York Times

10. And finally, read and enjoy.

The Weekender has 11 stories for you handpicked by our editors: Bruce Springsteen on Broadway, Joe Rogan's rise, a Spanish royal mystery, and more.

Did you follow the news this week? Test your knowledge. And here's the front page of our Sunday paper, the Sunday Review from Opinion and today's Mini Crossword and Spelling Bee. If you're in the mood to play more, find all our games here.

Have an independent week.

Shaminder Dulai compiled photos for this briefing.

Your Weekend Briefing is published Sundays at 6:30 a.m. Eastern.

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