Welcome to the Weekend Briefing. A year ago this week, China first identified the coronavirus and House Democrats were preparing articles of impeachment. Here we are again. |
| Anna Moneymaker for The New York Times |
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1. The drumbeat for a second Trump impeachment is getting louder. |
Speaker Nancy Pelosi could bring a new article of impeachment to the House floor as early as Monday, charging President Trump with “incitement of insurrection” for his role in encouraging a mob that went on to ransack the Capitol on Wednesday. |
Privately, Republican leaders said conviction was not out of the question. |
A second impeachment would be “a final showdown that will test the boundaries of politics, accountability and the Constitution,” writes Peter Baker, our chief White House correspondent. Lisa Murkowski and Patrick Toomey became the first Republican senators to publicly join the multitude of calls for Mr. Trump to resign. |
| Shannon Stapleton/Reuters |
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2. The Capitol rioters had different perspectives — QAnon, Proud Boys, elected officials, regular Americans — but one allegiance. |
All had assembled in response to President Trump’s repeated appeals to march to the Capitol on Wednesday, a day that he promised would be “wild.” Many Americans thought the rally near the White House beforehand was just one more salve for Mr. Trump’s ego, wounded by losing the election. But supporters heard something else — a battle cry. |
| Twitter |
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3. In the end, it was two California billionaires who pulled the plug on President Trump. |
Jack Dorsey of Twitter and Mark Zuckerberg of Facebook had been under pressure for years to hold Mr. Trump accountable. Making their move now “provides a clarifying lesson in where power resides in our digital society,” writes Kevin Roose, our technology columnist. |
| Alice Proujansky for The New York Times |
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The new variants only add pressure to speed up vaccine rollouts, both to keep caseloads from further skyrocketing and to protect as many people as possible before mutations undercut the vaccines’ efficacy. About 6.7 million people in the U.S. have received at least one of the two doses of a Covid-19 vaccine; more than 150,000 have gotten both. |
| Philip Cheung for The New York Times |
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5. A sustained surge of coronavirus infections has locked Southern California in a crisis. Above, a mobile testing unit. |
Los Angeles County has a coronavirus-related death every eight minutes, and the city is on the threshold of one in 10 residents testing positive for the virus. Dozens of overcrowded emergency rooms have shut their doors to ambulances for hours at a time. Oxygen and the portable canisters to supply it to patients are low. |
And in Chicago, some students are set to return to school on Monday for the first time since March. But it’s unclear how many of their teachers will be there to greet them: The mayor and teachers’ unions are locked in a bitter fight over whether to reopen classrooms. |
| Ed Wray/Getty Images |
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6. A search and rescue operation entered its second day after an Indonesian passenger jet crashed into the Java Sea minutes after takeoff in heavy monsoon rains. |
More than 60 people were believed to be aboard the Boeing 737-500, operated by Sriwijaya Air, that had taken off from Jakarta, the capital, on Saturday. Officials said they found body parts and some clothes from the passengers as well as part of the wreckage in an area known as the Thousand Islands. |
| Libby March for The New York Times |
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7. A supersized N.F.L. playoff weekend is missing one thing: fans. |
The crowd noise may be dulled, fewer Terrible Towels waved in Pittsburgh and less drama over all, but there are plenty of games in what the league is calling “Super Wild Card Weekend.” A few thousand fans watched the Buffalo Bills beat the Los Angeles Rams, above. |
| Mick Tsikas/Reuters |
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8. Is the platypus normal, and are we the thing that turned out strange? |
Platypuses diverged from other mammals about 187 million years ago, making them an important part of understanding evolution. And it may be that the traits that seem so strange to us were present in the ancestor we all share — that we were the ones who evolved away from those very traits. |
| Morgan Charles |
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9. A different “52 Places to Go.” |
The Times usually publishes its annual travel feature right about now, a visually rich list of worthy destinations for the coming year. But, of course, the pandemic has changed that. This year’s list hits closer to home: We’re calling it “52 Places to Love.” |
Instead of turning to reporters and photographers, The Times asked readers to tell us about their favorite places — near or far — and share photos. The responses included a town in Wales called Mumbles, the Scottish Highlands, above, and London’s St. James the Less Church in England. |
“No one told me ‘the love of my life’ could be a place,” writes Jody Greene about Ladakh, India. Take a look. Maybe you’ll find a new place to love. |
| Jack Davison for The New York Times |
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10. And finally, a plethora of great reads. |
The last two northern white rhinos on earth. A yacht, oligarchs and family drama. Life in a Tuscan village slides back in time. Check out the latest edition of The Weekender. |
Have a more peaceful week. |
Your Weekend Briefing is published Sundays at 6:30 a.m. Eastern. |
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