A Mosque (1986)


A mosque is where Muslim people learn, read and pray.Where I go with my little brothers we have to pay 2 pounds each week for learning everyday.We learn the Koran and how to pray.We have to go to everyday,if we don't we are punished.We must take an excuse note to say why we didn't come.I go in a van to the mosque Then I go to a big room to learn how to pray.We stay for one hour.Each week there is a test if you pass you go to another group for lessons.After the test you go to your own class where the register is taken.Then you must read to your teacher for one hour,if you make one mistake you are punished.The punishment is a beating with a bamboo stick.When we are finished we are taken home by van.

Shelina Akther(11)

From the BBC's Domesday Reloaded project, a remarkable - if somewhat misguided - attempt to document life in modern Britain circa 1986. Cool stuff.

In 1986, 900 years after William the Conqueror’s original Domesday Book, the BBC published the Domesday Project. The project was probably the most ambitious attempt ever to capture the essence of life in the United Kingdom. Over a million people contributed to this digital snapshot of the country.

The whole of the UK – including the Channel Islands and Isle of Man – was divided into 23,000 4x3km areas called Domesday Squares or “D-Blocks”.

Schools and community groups surveyed over 108,000 square km of the UK and submitted more than 147,819 pages of text articles and 23,225 amateur photos, cataloguing what it was like to live, work and play in their community.

This was about documenting everyday life - the ordinary rather than the extraordinary.

The project used the cutting edge technology of the day, and the data was eventually presented on a special type of Laser-Disc, read by a BBC master computer and navigated using an innovative tracker-ball pointing system.

But the technology didn’t catch on and the computers became very expensive for schools and libraries to buy. Very few people ever got to see the fruits of all of their hard work.



by datacharmer | Thursday, December 29, 2011
  , | 0 comments | | A Mosque (1986) @bluematterblogtwitter

I heart Nixie tubes


I'm looking to buy myself a nixie tube clock for (late) Christmas and ran into these awesome designs.




by datacharmer | Sunday, December 25, 2011
  | 0 comments | | I heart Nixie tubes @bluematterblogtwitter

A European precedent: Socrates drank the conium


Things in Europe are very simple.

There is only one way the Euro survives intact in the short to medium term: there need to be transfers from the core to the periphery. Nothing more, nothing less.

Now, there's two ways to do this: the democratic, 'above the table' way involves fiscal transfers, and it is crystal clear by now that won't be happening.

This leaves only one politically feasible way of ensuring the Euro remains the Eurozone currency for at least a while longer. When Italian spreads start increasing to unsustainable levels again (which they will do very soon), the ECB will need to step in and start buying more Italian bonds. Otherwise, the Banca d'Italia will need to start setting up parallel lira accounts for banks, bringing the Euro (and probably the world's financial system) to a rapid, unceremonious end.

Now, Mario Draghi has been at the receiving end of a lot of criticism for refusing to clearly commit to directly financing periphery debt, essentially making the necessary transfers from the core to the periphery in an undemocratic, 'under-the-table' way. The hope here amongst people who understand what's going on (many European leaders are not in this category) is that core country electorates won't notice that what the ECB is doing is essentially equivalent to a good old straightforward fiscal transfer.

These criticisms are fair in that it is clear now there is only the one option left, and the ECB is definitely not talking the talk.  But - and this is where I sympathize with the ECB position - direct financing of government debt is illegal, clearly and unequivocally. At times of emergency, an elected government may have enough justification to temporarily suspend the constitution or undertake illegal actions in the hope that events will offer enough justification for its actions when the dust settles. Mario Draghi and the ECB, on the other hand, have no democratic legitimacy, and no justification - even in an emergency - to stray from what is legally required or explicitly demanded of them by democratically elected politicians.

ECB intervention is the only way to rescue the Euro, and it would involve an illegal action by a small group of people with no democratic legitimacy. There is a European precedence to that: Socrates refused to disobey the - clearly flawed - laws of Athens, and paid with his life. It is unclear whether he would have done the same if the lives of all Athenians, rather than merely his own, were at stake. This is the question events will soon force on the ECB.
 
It's a regrettable state of affairs, but I cannot blame Draghi for refusing to operate outside the law.

ADDENDUM: Another aspect of the criticism that I find misplaced relates to the demand the ECB does something 'now' or 'before it is too late'. The way I see it, they can do this up until the very last second (just before Monti presses the 'print' button on the lira machine would do just fine), so why would they do it earlier when, at least theoretically, politicians may finally own up to their responsibilities?

Also, just to say that I find it pretty surreal to be (kind of) defending the ECB, when they have made myriad serious mistakes throughout the crisis, and many in their ranks are clearly clueless (Trichet was a first-rate buffoon). But criticism in the Krugmosphere is a bit too one-sided.

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