Top Stories this AM: Evergrande says it's building again; a coup in Sudan; a flying car not far off
Good morning and welcome to your weekday morning roundup of the top stories you need to know.
For more daily and weekly briefings, sign up for our newsletters here.
What's going on today:
- Flying cars? Hell yes. Chinese electric-vehicle maker Xpeng plans to mass produce flying cars by 2024 and says they'll cost less than $157,000. The low-altitude flying car has a steering wheel for driving on roads as well as a single lever for flight modes, according to TechCrunch.
- A coup in Sudan. Sudanese military launches apparent coup, puts Prime Minister Abdalla Hamdok under house arrest. The latest unrest comes after a failed coup attempt in September fractured the country along old lines, pitting Islamists who want a military government against those pushing for democracy.
- Paul Gosar's "blanket." Paul Gosar assured Jan. 6 protest organizers they would get a 'blanket pardon' while they were planning rallies: report. GOP Rep. Paul Gosar of Arizona encouraged two protest organizers to plan rallies on Jan. 6 by offering pardons from former President Donald Trump, the planners told Rolling Stone.
- Evergrande swears it's building again. China's Evergrande says it has resumed construction work on nearly a dozen additional projects, just days after it managed to avoid a default. Debt-laden Evergrande pledged to fulfill responsibilities to homebuyers and said it has resumed work on more than 10 projects in China.
- A crypto safety net. Facebook whistleblower Frances Haugen says she's supporting herself with crypto she purchased "at the right time." "For the foreseeable future, I'm fine, because I did buy crypto at the right time," Frances Haugen told The New York Times.
- That's all for now. See you tomorrow.