Plus: Australiaâs economy is doing fine without China, thank you [Quartz]( Good morning, Quartz readers! Was this newsletter forwarded to you? [Sign up here](. Forward to the friend who [had a great quarter](. Hereâs what you need to know A group of soldiers has taken over the government in Guinea. The head of special forces says military officers have detained the president and [dissolved the constitution](. Google reportedly locked Afghan government email accounts. The move [prevents the Taliban]( from accessing information about former government officials and their allies, just as the Taliban [entered the Panjshir Valley](, the only part of Afghanistan that it hadnât conquered. Thailandâs prime minister survived (another) no confidence vote. Despite [protests]( that the government had bungled its response to the pandemic, Prayut Chan-o-cha and five cabinet ministers [held onto power](. Australiaâs economy is fine despite Chinaâs import bans, thanks. After the restrictions earlier this year, Australia has quickly found new trading partners, treasurer Josh Frydenberg is [expected to announce Monday](. In US states where schools have opened, Covid cases are rising. Children in southern states have [experienced a surge in infections](, a sign of possible things to come as the rest of the countryâs students go back to school this month. ââUS ports are likely to be snarled into next year. American [maritime ports are log-jammed]( as retailers and manufacturers aim to replenish inventories, adding to a series of blockages in supply chains. England will implement vaccine passports this month. Nightclubs and other indoor venues will be required to verify that customers [have been fully vaccinated](. What to watch for El Salvadorâs big bitcoin bang. The Central American countryâs bitcoin wallet, known as âchivo,â is [set to launch on Sept. 7](, which would make El Salvador the first nation in the world to make bitcoin one of its national currencies. The move by president Nayib Bukele, who is hoping to modernize the countryâs financial system and attract entrepreneurs, obliges businesses to accept the US dollar (El Salvadorâs other national currency) as well as the original crypto token. Economists, meanwhile, worry that the effort could expose regular people to a rollercoaster of volatility and destabilize the economy. Congrats on a great quarter, everyone The US stock market just keeps setting records, and executives are celebrating booming sales: The words âgreat quarterâ and their synonyms were [mentioned during earnings calls a record 327 times in August](, according to call transcript data compiled by Sentieo. âCongratulationsâ also had a strong showing. Companies in healthcare, communications services, consumer staples, and information technology led reports of revenue exceeding estimates during the second quarter. In all four of those sectors, more than 90% of the firms blew away sales expectations. The snap back When it launched in 2011, Snapchat was the epitome of cool. It rode an early wave of growth to an ebullient 2017 stock listing, which valued Snapchat at $24 billion. But in 2018, Snapchatâs growth suddenly stalled. Pundits declared the app dead. Cut to 2019, and a miracle: Snapchat started growing again, thanks to new users outside the US and the pandemic. ⦠We go [deep on Snapchat]( in our most recent issue of The Company, exclusive to Quartz members. [Sign up today]( and use code QZEMAIL40 to get 40%. What weâre reading ðï¸ These are the US counties least susceptible to the effects of climate change. Flooding, fire, extreme heat? [Not here](. ð¨ð³ China is trying to convince its citizens to support a partnership with the Taliban. Response has [so far been mixed](. âï¸Quitting your job is political now. But will [individual white-collar workers quitting their jobs]( add up to a bigger paradigm shift? ð
ââï¸ A ârape demonstrationâ in Ivory Coast is getting some serious backlash. Itâs putting the [culture around victim blaming]( under the microscope. ð Why bitcoin and ethereum prices just keep rising. Weâve [got a few theories](, including bullish moves from Facebook, El Salvador, and Elon Musk. Surprising discoveries Scotlandâs beavers are backâand so is farmersâ ire. Beavers have [bounced back]( from near extinction, but their habit of felling trees and making dams are making them unpopular neighbors. Dutch cities are barring investors from buying cheap property. A law set to take effect Jan. 1 would [help would-be homeowners]( looking to find a place in the tight urban housing market. Great blue herons can have a rodent, as a treat. They usually eat fish, but turns out [theyâre not that picky](. US poison control centers are seeing lots of overdoses of a horse dewormer. The National Poison Data System saw [a 245% jump]( in overdoses of ivermectin, which some people believe can treat Covid-19 despite a lack of data, between July and August. A NYC home made of shipping containers sells for $5 million. The âgreenâ building is made of 21 shipping containers, and, yes, [itâs in Brooklyn](. 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. Send any news, comments, shipping container homes, and rat snacks to hi@qz.com. Get the most out of Quartz by [downloading our iOS app]( and [becoming a member](. Todayâs Daily Brief was brought to you by Alexandra Ossola and John Detrixhe. [facebook]( [twitter]( [external-link]( Enjoying Quartz Daily Brief? Forward it to a friend! They can [click here]( to sign up. If youâre 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.