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Plus: the first openly trans athlete in the Olympics Sponsored by Good morning, Quartz readers! Was

Plus: the first openly trans athlete in the Olympics [Quartz]( Sponsored by Good morning, Quartz readers! Was this newsletter forwarded to you? [Sign up here](. Forward to that friend who is [still betting on NFTs.]( Here’s what you need to know US senators finally unveiled a $1 trillion bipartisan infrastructure package. Late on Sunday night, they dropped [a 2700-page bill]( that represents president Joe Biden’s statement policy initiative. Square is taking over Afterpay for $29 billion. The US digital payments company [agreed a deal]( to purchase the Australian “buy now, pay later” giant. Meanwhile, US firm Parker-Hannifin agreed an $8.8 billion deal for the UK’s Meggitt. The [British defense and aerospace company]( employs more than 9,000 people globally. HSBC’s profits more than doubled. [The bank made $10.8 billion]( (before tax) in the first half of 2021, compared with $4.3 billion for the same period last year. Olympic news A Belarusian athlete refused to fly home from Tokyo. Sprinter Krystsina Tsimanouskaya says [her life would be in danger in Belarus](, and is applying for asylum at the Austrian embassy in Japan. Gymnast Simone Biles has now withdrawn from all but one Olympic event. She hasn’t indicated if she will participate in the [beam final on Tuesday](, her last chance to compete for the US in Tokyo. A 33-year-old Olympic record was finally broken. Jamaican Elaine Thompson-Herah retained her [women’s 100m crown](, running 10.61 seconds to beat Florence Griffith Joyner’s time from the 1988 Seoul Games. There was a shock winner in the men’s 100m final. [Relative unknown Lamont Marcell Jacobs]( claimed gold for Italy with a European record of 9.80 seconds. Sponsor content by Philips Espresso Fuel up for work and play. Whether you’re gearing up for a client meeting or winding down a dinner party, Philips 3200 Fully Automatic Espresso Machine with LatteGo has your fix, with five coffee presets available at the touch of a button. [Get it while it’s hot—or iced.]( What to watch for This evening in Tokyo, Laurel Hubbard, a weightlifter from New Zealand, will become the first openly transgender athlete to compete in an Olympics. At 43, she’s also the fourth oldest weightlifter ever to participate in the Games. Hubbard left the sport for fifteen years after competing as a man became “just too much to bear,” and returned in 2017, five years after transitioning. Hubbard will have to perform in the midst of a [debate over her right to be there](—a debate the International Olympic Committee’s medical director described as “large, difficult, and complex.” The IOC is reviewing the requirements for athletes participating in women’s events, including their reliance on testosterone levels, and the rules are likely to change before the next Games. “As an athlete all I can really do is to block that out,” Hubbard [said]( in 2017, about the controversy. “Because if I try and take that weight on board it just makes the lifts harder.” There are seven days left of the Tokyo Games. It’s not too late to sign up for our [Need to Know: Tokyo Olympics]( newsletter. Hit the button below to sign up. [⚡ Sign me up!]( Subscribe with one click. Why US companies can mandate shots Last week, as Delta cases rose dramatically in the US, Google, Facebook, and other big tech companies [pushed back their return-to-the-office plans]( and said that when employees do return, they must be vaccinated. [Walmart announced]( it will require vaccination for workers at its headquarters, and Disney will expect all non-union employees to get their shots. Fewer than 10% of US companies have mandated vaccination policies so far, but [they can and should lead on this](. Firms have the legal grounds to require vaccination, and their employees trust them more than any other institution, including the government, to “do what is right” and give them reliable information. [This chart shows how trusting people are from various sources. For example, 49% of respondents said they would believe their employer after hearing information from them only once or twice. 33% said the same of social media.] Something new in your inbox 🔮 Quartz membership does for the future what the Daily Brief does for the day. Today we’re launching a new series of emails for our members: The Forecast, The Company, How To, and The Weekend Brief. Read editor in chief Katherine Bell [explain the thinking behind them]( and [get 50% off]( your first year of membership. Handpicked Quartz (👇As always, the first story in this list is paywall-free.) 📈 [How US fast food chains can raise wages without raising prices]( 🎥 [Nigeria’s first feature-length animated film goes global after inking a new deal]( 🎮 [When will esports join the Olympics?]( 🙅‍♀️ [Quiz: Were these memorable quitting scenes real or from a movie?]( 💰 [Exxon’s plastics business is turning record profits]( 🐺 [Why China’s new ambassador to the US is unlikely to go full “wolf warrior”]( Surprising discoveries As city lights swallow the stars, some species may get disoriented. Animals like the dung beetle, which [uses the Milky Way as a guide](, are robbed of their ability to navigate. The Toronto Blue Jays returned home after 670 days on the road. During the pandemic, the Canadian government wouldn’t allow the Major League Baseball team [to play at home](. Astronomers discovered the largest known comet. Comet Bernardinelli-Bernstein is between 62 and 124 miles (100 to 200 km) across, and will make its [closest approach to the sun]( in 2031. Time crystals have been realized, physicists claim. It’s a phase of matter that cycles forever between states [without consuming energy](, and researchers at Google and Stanford say they’ve created it inside a quantum computer. Hungry sheep uncovered 500 graves in Ireland. The grazing farm animals were used to [clear an overgrown graveyard](, where they discovered tombs dating as far back as 1711. SPREAD THE WORD Over 500k readers and counting. You already know why half a million people read the Daily Brief, so why not spread the word? [Share the Daily Brief today]( and get rewarded. Our best wishes for a productive day. Please send any news, comments, wayfinding bugs, and peckish sheep to hi@qz.com. Get the most out of Quartz by[downloading our iOS app]( and[becoming a member](. Today’s Daily Brief was brought to you by Hasit Shah, Amanda Shendruk, Zach Seward, and Katherine Bell. [facebook]( [twitter]( [external-link]( Enjoying Quartz Daily Brief? Forward it to a friend! They can [click here]( to sign up. If you’re looking to unsubscribe, [click here](. Quartz | 675 Avenue of the Americas, 4th Fl | New York, NY 10010 | United States Copyright © 2021 Quartz, All rights reserved.

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