This is The World Today [View in browser](~/AASU4wA~/RgRmyF2uP0REaHR0cHM6Ly9saW5rLndoZXJlYnkudXMvbnJ0c2g1bzAzZC8_bGhfYWlkPTQ1MjExMTkmbGhfY2lkPWhnNDdrYWgweDBXA3NwY0IKZNu02OVkhhwDZVIbdHJpc3RyYW1iYWxkd2luODlAZ21haWwuY29tWAQAAABa) DailyChatter is an exclusive benefit for subscribers of The Charlotte Observer Good morning. Today is Wednesday, August 23, 2023, and this is
The World Today. [Forward this edition](~/AASU4wA~/RgRmyF2uP0RoaHR0cHM6Ly9saW5rLndoZXJlYnkudXMveGU1dmNscmFpei8_bGhfYWlkPTQ1MjExMTkmbGhfY2lkPWhnNDdrYWgweDAmbGhfZW09dHJpc3RyYW1iYWxkd2luODklNDBnbWFpbC5jb21XA3NwY0IKZNu02OVkhhwDZVIbdHJpc3RyYW1iYWxkd2luODlAZ21haWwuY29tWAQAAABa) ~/AASU4wA~/RgRmyF2uP0RoaHR0cHM6Ly9saW5rLndoZXJlYnkudXMvbWV1dHdlZDk0ei8_bGhfYWlkPTQ1MjExMTkmbGhfY2lkPWhnNDdrYWgweDAmbGhfZW09dHJpc3RyYW1iYWxkd2luODklNDBnbWFpbC5jb21XA3NwY0IKZNu02OVkhhwDZVIbdHJpc3RyYW1iYWxkd2luODlAZ21haWwuY29tWAQAAABa Need to Know Lose, Lose [Zimbabwe](~/AASU4wA~/RgRmyF2uP0RoaHR0cHM6Ly9saW5rLndoZXJlYnkudXMveGg4eXdjb205dy8_bGhfYWlkPTQ1MjExMTkmbGhfY2lkPWhnNDdrYWgweDAmbGhfZW09dHJpc3RyYW1iYWxkd2luODklNDBnbWFpbC5jb21XA3NwY0IKZNu02OVkhhwDZVIbdHJpc3RyYW1iYWxkd2luODlAZ21haWwuY29tWAQAAABa) Police in Zimbabwe arrested 40 leaders of the opposition Citizensâ Coalition for Change (CCC) party on charges of blocking traffic about a week before the southern African countryâs voters go to the polls to choose a new president, parliament, and local councils. Law enforcement claimed that the CCC notified them of their demonstration but diverted from their planned path, Africanews [reported](~/AASU4wA~/RgRmyF2uP0REaHR0cHM6Ly9saW5rLndoZXJlYnkudXMvbzE2dHN4NDFuZC8_bGhfYWlkPTQ1MjExMTkmbGhfY2lkPWhnNDdrYWgweDBXA3NwY0IKZNu02OVkhhwDZVIbdHJpc3RyYW1iYWxkd2luODlAZ21haWwuY29tWAQAAABa). The election on Aug. 23 is the second since President Emmerson Mnangagwa of the ruling Zimbabwe African National UnionâPatriotic Front (ZANUâPF) party took power in a coup in 2017 that deposed longtime leader Robert Mugabe. Mugabe ran the country like an autocrat since 1980, when white minority rule ended in the former British colony. Mnangagwa similarly won office in a disputed 2018 election marked by allegations of fraud and other irregularities. Mnangagwa, 80, a former Mugabe ally, is squaring off against the 45-year-old CCC leader Nelson Chamisa. Inflation and human rights are at the top of votersâ minds. Mnangagwa took office pledging to uphold free speech, political expression and other rights. But his critics say that little has changed from Mugabeâs iron rule. As the BBC [explained](~/AASU4wA~/RgRmyF2uP0REaHR0cHM6Ly9saW5rLndoZXJlYnkudXMvOHJyYjVkNHU5cC8_bGhfYWlkPTQ1MjExMTkmbGhfY2lkPWhnNDdrYWgweDBXA3NwY0IKZNu02OVkhhwDZVIbdHJpc3RyYW1iYWxkd2luODlAZ21haWwuY29tWAQAAABa), for example, Chamisa won 44 percent of the vote in 2018. But two years later, a court kicked him out of the Movement for Democratic Change opposition party, forcing him to build a new political organization without state funding. For this election, the government has banned voters living abroad to vote, a move that will likely hurt Chamisa. Human Rights Watch [published](~/AASU4wA~/RgRmyF2uP0REaHR0cHM6Ly9saW5rLndoZXJlYnkudXMvajg5N2NjYnVvaC8_bGhfYWlkPTQ1MjExMTkmbGhfY2lkPWhnNDdrYWgweDBXA3NwY0IKZNu02OVkhhwDZVIbdHJpc3RyYW1iYWxkd2luODlAZ21haWwuY29tWAQAAABa) a report entitled ââCrush Them Like Liceâ: Repression of Civil and Political Rights Ahead of Zimbabweâs August 2023 Election,â that gives an idea of the scale of the Zimbabwean governmentâs underhanded meddling, including âweaponizing the criminal justice system against the opposition.â Mnangagwa has also proposed legislation that would punish âunpatriotic acts,â including meeting with foreign agents (a catchall term that could refer to spies â or humanitarian non-governmental organizations) with prison sentences of 20 years if those meetings involve talk of changing the government, [added](~/AASU4wA~/RgRmyF2uP0REaHR0cHM6Ly9saW5rLndoZXJlYnkudXMvYzFvN2wxcmJvMy8_bGhfYWlkPTQ1MjExMTkmbGhfY2lkPWhnNDdrYWgweDBXA3NwY0IKZNu02OVkhhwDZVIbdHJpc3RyYW1iYWxkd2luODlAZ21haWwuY29tWAQAAABa) the Associated Press. Analysts say the president needs to compromise his peopleâs rights because heâs arguably been incompetent at managing the economy. Still, part of this isnât his fault: The cost of living in Zimbabwe has skyrocketed in the last year because of the lagging effects of the pandemic and Russiaâs invasion of Ukraine, both of which have led to increased food and fuel costs. Through May this year, prices were almost 86 percent higher compared with 12 months earlier. The presidentâs critics, meanwhile, want a national discussion on the economy, job creation, electricity shortages, diversifying the economy, and regaining more control of the countryâs resources, [said](~/AASU4wA~/RgRmyF2uP0REaHR0cHM6Ly9saW5rLndoZXJlYnkudXMvdTZnc3Q4cHE1ai8_bGhfYWlkPTQ1MjExMTkmbGhfY2lkPWhnNDdrYWgweDBXA3NwY0IKZNu02OVkhhwDZVIbdHJpc3RyYW1iYWxkd2luODlAZ21haWwuY29tWAQAAABa) members of a Chatham House roundtable discussion. Zimbabwe is a major exporter of lithium, an important component in electric vehicle batteries and other green tech, but Chinese companies control many of the countryâs mines, Foreign Policy [noted](~/AASU4wA~/RgRmyF2uP0REaHR0cHM6Ly9saW5rLndoZXJlYnkudXMvMHc5aXI1bmlyZi8_bGhfYWlkPTQ1MjExMTkmbGhfY2lkPWhnNDdrYWgweDBXA3NwY0IKZNu02OVkhhwDZVIbdHJpc3RyYW1iYWxkd2luODlAZ21haWwuY29tWAQAAABa). Telling voters to shut up and pay up doesnât seem like a winning strategy, but Mnangagwa is unlikely to leave things to chance. ~/AASU4wA~/RgRmyF2uP0RoaHR0cHM6Ly9saW5rLndoZXJlYnkudXMvOXl2bW9uYXgybS8_bGhfYWlkPTQ1MjExMTkmbGhfY2lkPWhnNDdrYWgweDAmbGhfZW09dHJpc3RyYW1iYWxkd2luODklNDBnbWFpbC5jb21XA3NwY0IKZNu02OVkhhwDZVIbdHJpc3RyYW1iYWxkd2luODlAZ21haWwuY29tWAQAAABa [Advertisement](~/AASU4wA~/RgRmyF2uP0SHaHR0cHM6Ly9yZXZtYWlsLnJldmNvbnRlbnQuY29tL2NsaWNrLz9pZD0yNzY4MzImdG90YWw9NCZvZmZzZXQ9MCZrZXk9ZGFpbHktY2hhdHRlci0tZGFpbHktY2hhdHRlci1jaGFybG90dGUtb2JzZXJ2ZXJfXzQ1MjExMTloZzQ3a2FoMHgwVwNzcGNCCmTbtNjlZIYcA2VSG3RyaXN0cmFtYmFsZHdpbjg5QGdtYWlsLmNvbVgEAAAAWg~~) The World, Briefly New Beginnings [Thailand](~/AASU4wA~/RgRmyF2uP0RoaHR0cHM6Ly9saW5rLndoZXJlYnkudXMvNXJ3aHU0NXdnai8_bGhfYWlkPTQ1MjExMTkmbGhfY2lkPWhnNDdrYWgweDAmbGhfZW09dHJpc3RyYW1iYWxkd2luODklNDBnbWFpbC5jb21XA3NwY0IKZNu02OVkhhwDZVIbdHJpc3RyYW1iYWxkd2luODlAZ21haWwuY29tWAQAAABa) Real estate tycoon Srettha Thavisin secured enough votes in parliament to become Thailandâs new prime minister Tuesday, finally ending the political deadlock in the Southeast Asian country following Mayâs elections, CNBC [reported](~/AASU4wA~/RgRmyF2uP0REaHR0cHM6Ly9saW5rLndoZXJlYnkudXMvOWg5aWl4eHYwdC8_bGhfYWlkPTQ1MjExMTkmbGhfY2lkPWhnNDdrYWgweDBXA3NwY0IKZNu02OVkhhwDZVIbdHJpc3RyYW1iYWxkd2luODlAZ21haWwuY29tWAQAAABa). Srettha, a candidate of the populist Pheu Thai Party, received 482 votes, including from conservative and military-backed lawmakers. Since March, Thailand has been under a caretaker government because of a parliamentary deadlock. The Move Forward party emerged as the largest group after Mayâs parliamentary election, but its bid for leadership was thwarted when its leader, Pita Limjaroenrat, fell 51 votes short of the required 375 votes needed to become prime minister. This paved the way for Pheu Thai â the second largest party in the legislature â to pursue power on its own after initially supporting Move Forward. On Monday, Pheu Thai announced an 11-party coalition, gathering 314 votes to form a government. However, this political union also includes pro-military parties associated with former Prime Minister Prayuth Chan-ocha. Srettha will inherit the task to revitalize Thailand after almost 10 years of military rule and to improve its economy, which grew by 1.8 percent in the second quarter but fell short of the expected 3.1 percent expansion. His appointment also coincided with the return of Thaksin Shinawatra, a former prime minister and Pheu Thaiâs founder, to Thailand after 15 years of self-imposed exile. Thaksin was ousted in a military coup in 2006 and has been living abroad to avoid charges of corruption, the Guardian [wrote](~/AASU4wA~/RgRmyF2uP0REaHR0cHM6Ly9saW5rLndoZXJlYnkudXMvaHVzNG5lY2NkeC8_bGhfYWlkPTQ1MjExMTkmbGhfY2lkPWhnNDdrYWgweDBXA3NwY0IKZNu02OVkhhwDZVIbdHJpc3RyYW1iYWxkd2luODlAZ21haWwuY29tWAQAAABa). He now faces eight years in prison, but analysts noted that the former leader could request a pardon from the new Pheu Thai-led government. Even so, observers added that itâs unclear if Pheu Thai will be able to grant that pardon, and also questioned the stability of the 11-party coalition. The political union will likely hold together for now, driven by a shared interest in preventing the Move Forward party from entering the government. ~/AASU4wA~/RgRmyF2uP0RoaHR0cHM6Ly9saW5rLndoZXJlYnkudXMvcHlsMWNwanBhdS8_bGhfYWlkPTQ1MjExMTkmbGhfY2lkPWhnNDdrYWgweDAmbGhfZW09dHJpc3RyYW1iYWxkd2luODklNDBnbWFpbC5jb21XA3NwY0IKZNu02OVkhhwDZVIbdHJpc3RyYW1iYWxkd2luODlAZ21haWwuY29tWAQAAABa The Slippery Slope [Niger](~/AASU4wA~/RgRmyF2uP0RoaHR0cHM6Ly9saW5rLndoZXJlYnkudXMveTJ6YWp5OGE0by8_bGhfYWlkPTQ1MjExMTkmbGhfY2lkPWhnNDdrYWgweDAmbGhfZW09dHJpc3RyYW1iYWxkd2luODklNDBnbWFpbC5jb21XA3NwY0IKZNu02OVkhhwDZVIbdHJpc3RyYW1iYWxkd2luODlAZ21haWwuY29tWAQAAABa) The Economic Community of West African States (ECOWAS) rejected a proposal by Nigerâs military junta to return to civilian rule within three years, a move that prolongs the ongoing regional crisis as the bloc mulls military intervention, the Voice of America [reported](~/AASU4wA~/RgRmyF2uP0REaHR0cHM6Ly9saW5rLndoZXJlYnkudXMvdG9iaGZqN2JzNi8_bGhfYWlkPTQ1MjExMTkmbGhfY2lkPWhnNDdrYWgweDBXA3NwY0IKZNu02OVkhhwDZVIbdHJpc3RyYW1iYWxkd2luODlAZ21haWwuY29tWAQAAABa) Tuesday. The regional blocâs dismissal came a few days after Nigerâs junta leader Abdourahamane Tchiani said that the military government would relinquish power within three years. He added that the juntaâs ambition âis not to confiscate powerâ and urged Nigerien political parties to submit a vision for the transition within a month. The Nigerien leader met with an ECOWAS delegation last week, with the bloc urging the return to democracy in Niger and the release of ousted President Mohamed Bazoum. The president has been held captive since the July 26 coup. But on Tuesday, ECOWAS officials called for an immediate return to constitutional order, warning that the juntaâs proposal was an attempt by the military leaders to stay in power. The organization imposed a series of sanctions on Niger following the coup. It also threatened military action and recently activated a standby force to intervene in the West African country if negotiations fail. Analysts cautioned that ECOWAS shouldnât trust the juntaâs transition plans because they are similar to proposals from the military governments in Mali and Burkina Faso, which came to power following recent coups in those countries. Meanwhile, the African Union (AU) suspended Niger from the continental bloc Tuesday and ordered the return of constitutional order, Al Jazeera [added](~/AASU4wA~/RgRmyF2uP0REaHR0cHM6Ly9saW5rLndoZXJlYnkudXMvbXFyd2M4MDVveS8_bGhfYWlkPTQ1MjExMTkmbGhfY2lkPWhnNDdrYWgweDBXA3NwY0IKZNu02OVkhhwDZVIbdHJpc3RyYW1iYWxkd2luODlAZ21haWwuY29tWAQAAABa). The AU also called on its members and the international community to refrain from taking any action that could legitimize Nigerâs military government, and warned against external interference â including the involvement of private military companies. ~/AASU4wA~/RgRmyF2uP0RoaHR0cHM6Ly9saW5rLndoZXJlYnkudXMveGYxdWJtOHV2YS8_bGhfYWlkPTQ1MjExMTkmbGhfY2lkPWhnNDdrYWgweDAmbGhfZW09dHJpc3RyYW1iYWxkd2luODklNDBnbWFpbC5jb21XA3NwY0IKZNu02OVkhhwDZVIbdHJpc3RyYW1iYWxkd2luODlAZ21haWwuY29tWAQAAABa [Advertisement](~/AASU4wA~/RgRmyF2uP0SHaHR0cHM6Ly9yZXZtYWlsLnJldmNvbnRlbnQuY29tL2NsaWNrLz9pZD0yNzY4MzImdG90YWw9NCZvZmZzZXQ9MSZrZXk9ZGFpbHktY2hhdHRlci0tZGFpbHktY2hhdHRlci1jaGFybG90dGUtb2JzZXJ2ZXJfXzQ1MjExMTloZzQ3a2FoMHgwVwNzcGNCCmTbtNjlZIYcA2VSG3RyaXN0cmFtYmFsZHdpbjg5QGdtYWlsLmNvbVgEAAAAWg~~) The Hostages [Canada](~/AASU4wA~/RgRmyF2uP0RoaHR0cHM6Ly9saW5rLndoZXJlYnkudXMvbmJqcGNyY2tvZS8_bGhfYWlkPTQ1MjExMTkmbGhfY2lkPWhnNDdrYWgweDAmbGhfZW09dHJpc3RyYW1iYWxkd2luODklNDBnbWFpbC5jb21XA3NwY0IKZNu02OVkhhwDZVIbdHJpc3RyYW1iYWxkd2luODlAZ21haWwuY29tWAQAAABa) Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau slammed Facebookâs parent company Meta for blocking news content in Canada, as the country fights massive wildfires that have forced the evacuation of tens of thousands of people from their homes, and provinces to declare states of emergency, Bloomberg [reported](~/AASU4wA~/RgRmyF2uP0REaHR0cHM6Ly9saW5rLndoZXJlYnkudXMvNmgwZTVnamFhci8_bGhfYWlkPTQ1MjExMTkmbGhfY2lkPWhnNDdrYWgweDBXA3NwY0IKZNu02OVkhhwDZVIbdHJpc3RyYW1iYWxkd2luODlAZ21haWwuY29tWAQAAABa). The prime minister blamed the US-based social media company for âchoosing to put corporate profits ahead of ensuring that local news organizations can get up-to-date information to Canadians and reach them.â âIn a larger picture, thatâs bad for democracy because democracy depends on people being able to trust high-quality journalism and of all sorts of different perspectives and points of view,â he added. âBut right now, in an emergency situation, up-to-date local information is more important than ever.â This month, Meta began blocking news on its sites in Canada after Ottawa passed the Online News Act, which requires digital platforms to negotiate payments with local publishers for content. While news distribution doesnât solely rely on Facebook and Instagram, these platforms were one of the key avenues for media outlets to connect with their audience. This means that links and content shared by publishers and broadcasters on these platforms are no longer accessible to people in Canada. Users within the country are also unable to read and share articles. Still, Meta representatives countered that they will stand by their decision to block news content, adding that people in Canada can still use Facebook and Instagram to engage with their communities and access reliable information, including official content, [according](~/AASU4wA~/RgRmyF2uP0REaHR0cHM6Ly9saW5rLndoZXJlYnkudXMvYWo4ZW0xMDM3bC8_bGhfYWlkPTQ1MjExMTkmbGhfY2lkPWhnNDdrYWgweDBXA3NwY0IKZNu02OVkhhwDZVIbdHJpc3RyYW1iYWxkd2luODlAZ21haWwuY29tWAQAAABa) to the New York Post. The act has drawn criticism from tech companies, with Mark Zuckerberg, the head of Meta, saying that the law wrongly assumes that the company gains excessive benefits from shared news content. Google, owned by Alphabet, is also planning to block news in response to the law. Meanwhile, Trudeau has deployed the military to deal with fast-spreading wildfires in British Columbia that have resulted in the evacuation of more than 35,000 people and the province to declare a state of emergency. At the same time, the Northwest Territories capital of Yellowknife ordered the evacuation of the entire city. Canada has experienced an unprecedented number of wildfires this year with blazes that have produced heavy smoke that has even affected parts of the United States, including New York City. ~/AASU4wA~/RgRmyF2uP0RoaHR0cHM6Ly9saW5rLndoZXJlYnkudXMvdnU4dTM5bDFxOS8_bGhfYWlkPTQ1MjExMTkmbGhfY2lkPWhnNDdrYWgweDAmbGhfZW09dHJpc3RyYW1iYWxkd2luODklNDBnbWFpbC5jb21XA3NwY0IKZNu02OVkhhwDZVIbdHJpc3RyYW1iYWxkd2luODlAZ21haWwuY29tWAQAAABa [Advertisement](~/AASU4wA~/RgRmyF2uP0SHaHR0cHM6Ly9yZXZtYWlsLnJldmNvbnRlbnQuY29tL2NsaWNrLz9pZD0yNzY4MzImdG90YWw9NCZvZmZzZXQ9MiZrZXk9ZGFpbHktY2hhdHRlci0tZGFpbHktY2hhdHRlci1jaGFybG90dGUtb2JzZXJ2ZXJfXzQ1MjExMTloZzQ3a2FoMHgwVwNzcGNCCmTbtNjlZIYcA2VSG3RyaXN0cmFtYmFsZHdpbjg5QGdtYWlsLmNvbVgEAAAAWg~~) Discoveries Perpetual Storms Astronomers have known that Jupiterâs massive storm known as the âGreat Red Spotâ has been running on the gas giant for hundreds of years. Now, a new research [paper](~/AASU4wA~/RgRmyF2uP0REaHR0cHM6Ly9saW5rLndoZXJlYnkudXMvNGdpbDd6M3YxOC8_bGhfYWlkPTQ1MjExMTkmbGhfY2lkPWhnNDdrYWgweDBXA3NwY0IKZNu02OVkhhwDZVIbdHJpc3RyYW1iYWxkd2luODlAZ21haWwuY29tWAQAAABa) found evidence that Saturn, another gas giant, also experiences similar long-lasting freak storms, Live Science [reported](~/AASU4wA~/RgRmyF2uP0REaHR0cHM6Ly9saW5rLndoZXJlYnkudXMvbjNvOGY3OWZtbi8_bGhfYWlkPTQ1MjExMTkmbGhfY2lkPWhnNDdrYWgweDBXA3NwY0IKZNu02OVkhhwDZVIbdHJpc3RyYW1iYWxkd2luODlAZ21haWwuY29tWAQAAABa). These âmegastormsâ â also known as âGreat White Spotsâ â occur every 20 or 30 years in the planetâs northern hemisphere and rage for months. Since 1876, astronomers have observed these planet-wide storms that span hundreds of thousands of miles, [according](~/AASU4wA~/RgRmyF2uP0REaHR0cHM6Ly9saW5rLndoZXJlYnkudXMvZXRoZG5tcjU5Yy8_bGhfYWlkPTQ1MjExMTkmbGhfY2lkPWhnNDdrYWgweDBXA3NwY0IKZNu02OVkhhwDZVIbdHJpc3RyYW1iYWxkd2luODlAZ21haWwuY29tWAQAAABa) to Newsweek. Meanwhile, the most recent one occurred in December 2010, and NASAâs Cassini spacecraft had a close view of the storm for its entire 200-day life span. These storms last much longer than Earthâs due to the longer duration of the planetâs orbit around the Sun: Saturn takes around 29 Earth years to complete a single lap around the Sun due to its distance â it is 10 times further away. As a result, its seasons each last around 7 years. In their study, a research team analyzed Saturn following its most recent storm and found that its effect is still seen on Saturn to this day even though it lasted less than a year. Using a special telescope to study the planetâs radio signals, researchers found signs of all six previously recorded megastorms over the past 130 years, as well as a potentially new storm never recorded before. These signals appeared as strange ammonia gas spots in the planetâs atmosphere. Some areas had less gas than usual, while others had more, suggesting that megastorms move ammonia gas from high up in the atmosphere to lower levels â a process that could last for centuries after the storm ends. Although there are many mysteries regarding the inner workings and behavior of these storms, studying them gives scientists insights into how gas giants form. It also helps understand why these storms become so gigantic, similar to the âspotsâ seen on Saturn or Jupiter. âUnderstanding the mechanisms of the largest storms in the solar system puts the theory of hurricanes into a broader cosmic context, challenging our current knowledge and pushing the boundaries of terrestrial meteorology,â said lead author Cheng Li. ~/AASU4wA~/RgRmyF2uP0RoaHR0cHM6Ly9saW5rLndoZXJlYnkudXMvcDI1eHQ3ZjJ5bC8_bGhfYWlkPTQ1MjExMTkmbGhfY2lkPWhnNDdrYWgweDAmbGhfZW09dHJpc3RyYW1iYWxkd2luODklNDBnbWFpbC5jb21XA3NwY0IKZNu02OVkhhwDZVIbdHJpc3RyYW1iYWxkd2luODlAZ21haWwuY29tWAQAAABa [Advertisement](~/AASU4wA~/RgRmyF2uP0SHaHR0cHM6Ly9yZXZtYWlsLnJldmNvbnRlbnQuY29tL2NsaWNrLz9pZD0yNzY4MzImdG90YWw9NCZvZmZzZXQ9MyZrZXk9ZGFpbHktY2hhdHRlci0tZGFpbHktY2hhdHRlci1jaGFybG90dGUtb2JzZXJ2ZXJfXzQ1MjExMTloZzQ3a2FoMHgwVwNzcGNCCmTbtNjlZIYcA2VSG3RyaXN0cmFtYmFsZHdpbjg5QGdtYWlsLmNvbVgEAAAAWg~~) Thank you for reading or listening to DailyChatter. If you’re not already a subscriber, you can become one by going to [dailychatter.com/subscribe](~/AASU4wA~/RgRmyF2uP0RoaHR0cHM6Ly9saW5rLndoZXJlYnkudXMvbnh2ejZtYnd2ZS8_bGhfYWlkPTQ1MjExMTkmbGhfY2lkPWhnNDdrYWgweDAmbGhfZW09dHJpc3RyYW1iYWxkd2luODklNDBnbWFpbC5jb21XA3NwY0IKZNu02OVkhhwDZVIbdHJpc3RyYW1iYWxkd2luODlAZ21haWwuY29tWAQAAABa). [Forward this edition](~/AASU4wA~/RgRmyF2uP0RoaHR0cHM6Ly9saW5rLndoZXJlYnkudXMvNXVwcDU4ZGN3ZS8_bGhfYWlkPTQ1MjExMTkmbGhfY2lkPWhnNDdrYWgweDAmbGhfZW09dHJpc3RyYW1iYWxkd2luODklNDBnbWFpbC5jb21XA3NwY0IKZNu02OVkhhwDZVIbdHJpc3RyYW1iYWxkd2luODlAZ21haWwuY29tWAQAAABa) [Unsubscribe from this list](~/AASU4wA~/RgRmyF2uP0RWaHR0cHM6Ly9yZWFkLmxldHRlcmhlYWQuZW1haWwvZGFpbHktY2hhdHRlci1jaGFybG90dGUtb2JzZXJ2ZXIvdW5zdWJzY3JpYmU_aWQ9QDQ1MjExMTlXA3NwY0IKZNu02OVkhhwDZVIbdHJpc3RyYW1iYWxkd2luODlAZ21haWwuY29tWAQAAABa) Copyright © 2023 DailyChatter, All rights reserved. 32 Atlantic Avenue, Boston, MA 02110 [Made with Letterhead [Letterhead logo]](~/AASU4wA~/RgRmyF2uP0QiaHR0cHM6Ly9saW5rLndoZXJlYnkudXMvbmVwbm83czh5c1cDc3BjQgpk27TY5WSGHANlUht0cmlzdHJhbWJhbGR3aW44OUBnbWFpbC5jb21YBAAAAFo~)