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Challenging the victors’ myths

By - Feb 08,2015 - Last updated at Feb 08,2015

White City — Black City: Architecture and War in Tel Aviv and Jaffa

Sharon Rotbard

Translated by Orit Gat

London: Pluto Press, 2015

Pp. 244

First published in Hebrew 10 years ago, “White City — Black City” is part of a rare, but growing body of literature wherein Israelis take a hard, honest look at the consequences of how their state was founded and developed.

While so many focus on Jerusalem as the core of the Israeli-Palestinian conflict, Rotbard finds the relationship between Jaffa and Tel Aviv to be the most emblematic of how Israel was built, literally, on the ruins of Palestine, and also sidelined non-influential Jewish communities.

Rotbard is an architect, and from his perspective, architecture is always political, reflecting power relations: “Cities and histories are constructed in a similar manner — always by the victor, always for the victor, and always according to the victors’ record... the decision to demolish an old building or to conserve an existing one defines what is fated to be forgotten and what is worthy of remembrance.” (p. 3)

The white-black imagery of the title is pivotal for demolishing myths about Tel Aviv. It recurs throughout the book to dissect material reality, architectural visions, actual structures, and the racist, colonial prejudice that white is superior to black. 

While Tel Aviv is marketed as a modern, Bauhaus-style, white city erected on pristine sand dunes, Rotbard points out the “white lies” involved: It was actually built by levelling the dunes; its appearance was always more greyish; its architecture, though definitely European-inspired, was mostly contrary to Bauhaus concepts; and most of the land covered by today’s city was inhabited and cultivated long before its founding. 

The preferred inhabitants of the White City were also white, i.e., Ashkenazi (European-origin) Jews, but “whiteness” did not come naturally. It started with Zionist militias destroying Manshieh and Jaffa, and expelling their Palestinian inhabitants, and has continued with aggressive urban development projects that pushed poor, Mizrahi Jewish communities and immigrant workers southwards toward Jaffa.

Accordingly, “the white of Tel Aviv is also the white of the eraser, the Tipp-Ex. Tel Aviv is a predatory city, a wolf in sheep’s skin; the White City is the skin.” (p. 176)

Jaffa, which until 1948 was a prosperous, cosmopolitan commercial and cultural centre —Rotbard considers it to have been Palestine’s de facto capital, was designated as the Black City.

The orange orchards which had underpinned its wealth were destroyed, the land confiscated and citrus cultivation moved elsewhere. It became a dumping ground for industries “the White City considers too dangerous to be near its elite population”, but otherwise neglected by the municipality. 

Also “dumped” here were those who worked in undesirable sectors — “minorities who are distinguishable from mainstream Israeli society because of their religion, nationality or skin colour. But paradoxically, this has actually insured that the Black City is the most colourful, heterogeneous and cosmopolitan city space in the whole of Israel… the only urban space within the municipality which gives the impression that Tel Aviv might actually be the global city it advertises itself to be.” (pp. 64-66)

Jaffa’s separation from and subordination to Tel Aviv was a conscious decision of the Zionist elite, and greatly furthered by the infrastructural development undertaken by the British Mandate. How Tel Aviv was built and what happened to Jaffa as a result apply to Jewish settlement throughout the country.

Rotbard gives a detailed description of the military strategy whereby Jaffa was conquered in 1948, and draws parallels to Israeli army operations in the West Bank and Gaza until today. “In this sense the Palestinian city of Rafah is no different to the Palestinian city of Jaffa, or Salama, or Abu Kabir; they all share a long history as victims of military, urban and architectural actions whose sole goal has been to create a new geography in their place using processes of demolition and effacement.” (p. 160)

Similarly, he compares the wall to the outer limits of the White City. While Rotbard does not use the term apartheid, the thrust of his argument points in this direction.

In challenging the official story of Tel Aviv, Rotbard analyses many aspects of Israeli policy and society from the differences between Labour’s and Likud’s approaches to urban planning and housing, to the links between ideology and physical space, and the implications of Israel’s militarism for architecture and culture more broadly.

This is a study not only of architecture’s socio-political impact, but of the consequences of colonialism, privatisation and real estate speculation.

Having chosen to live in the Black City, the author’s analysis is based on personal experience as well as extensive research and professional expertise. Linking between neighbourhood politics, city politics, national politics and global politics, this book is an important contribution to reconstructing the real history of Palestine/Israel.

One year on, Microsoft CEO shifts focus at technology giant

By - Feb 08,2015 - Last updated at Feb 08,2015

NEW YORK — With one year under his belt, Microsoft chief executive Satya Nadella has made strides in changing the focus of the technology giant that some feared was turning into a dinosaur.

Nadella, who took over from Steve Ballmer in February 2014, has been moving to make Microsoft more relevant in the new tech world led by mobile-focused rivals such as Apple and Google.

Microsoft, which can no longer rest on its PC dominance with its Windows operating system, has taken a page from the playbook of the late Steve Jobs at Apple — providing software like Office for free on rival devices like the iPad and Android-powered tablets.

Nadella also managed to surprise and wow people with Microsoft’s HoloLens goggles, delivering holograms and hitting a sweet spot between Google Glass and virtual reality headgear.

“He hasn’t solved all problems, but he’s made moves in the right direction strategically,” said J.P. Gownder, analyst at Forrester Research.

Even though many of the new things unveiled were in the works for years, Nadella appears to have injected new energy into the Redmond, Washington-based tech powerhouse.

Gownder said it was “a wise move” to bring popular Microsoft programmes like Word, Excel and PowerPoint to Android and Apple devices, because Windows has been slow to gain traction in the mobile universe.

“When you have software, you have to run that software where the customers are,” instead of using it as “a weapon” in a war of operating systems, he said.

In a move aimed at reaching a younger tech user base, Microsoft agreed in September to buy the Swedish group behind the hugely popular video game “Minecraft” for $2.5 billion, bolstering its gaming division.

The deal for Mojang gives Microsoft one of the best-known video games of all time — one which is played on game consoles as well as PCs and mobile devices.

 

‘A different company’

 

“Microsoft is a different company now. Microsoft is not making stupid mistakes,” said Trip Chowdhry, at Global Equities Research.

“This year is more of a reinvention and restrategising year. 2015 will be when the company may have some progress on initiatives like mobile and cloud.”

Nadella has made some missteps, notably in comments suggesting working women should trust “karma” when it comes to securing pay raises, but quickly moved to back away from the controversy.

He ordered the biggest reorganisation in Microsoft’s history, cutting some 18,000 jobs — or 14 per cent of the workforce — under a plan aimed at simplifying the corporate structure and integrating the mobile division of Finland’s Nokia.

Wall Street has been happy with the new leadership — Microsoft shares gained 36 per cent in Nadella’s first eight months, but pulled back in early 2015.

 

Windows 10 test

 

Nadella, 47, has been pressing cloud and mobile computing since taking the reins, and is seeing some progress in areas like the Azure cloud platform for business.

But Microsoft still faces a big test with its upcoming Windows 10 platform, which aims to keep PC users while also powering mobile phones and tablets.

Some 1.5 billion people around the world use Windows-powered computers and Microsoft is intent on renewing its relevance in an age of mobile computing. The new platform is being designed with feedback from millions of “insiders” testing early versions of the operating system.

Microsoft needs to remake its business, which had been based on one-time Windows license sales, to a new model for the mobile world, say analysts.

Colin Gillis at BGC Partners said the plan appears to be working.

“We remain positive on the efforts to reshape Microsoft into a recurring revenue, subscription-based business,” he said.

Gillis said this means some “turbulence” as higher-margin software licence sales are replaced with lower-margin subscriptions.

Windows 10 will be crucial for Microsoft, which is hoping to win over developers as well as users with a platform that works on mobile devices as well as PCs.

According to Gownder, Windows 10 is “the best opportunity yet for Microsoft to come back in the game in mobile”.

JT’s most senior proofreader calls it a day after 35 years of service

By - Feb 08,2015 - Last updated at Feb 08,2015

AMMAN — At the end of January, The Jordan Times bade farewell to one of its longest serving soldiers — veteran proofreader Rajan Thonipurakal.

Rajan has worked at the JT for nearly 35 years, five years shy of the paper’s four decades.

“A calm, unassuming colleague who we take for granted, sun or storm, snow or floods, Raj would not miss a day of work, walking for hours in the snow if needed. They don’t make them like this anymore,” says Managing Editor Ica Wahbeh.

The soft-spoken, kind-hearted Rajan joined the ranks of the JT in the summer of 1981 for a salary of JD48 when his wife, Alice, took up a job as a nurse in Jordan.

A native of India’s southern state of Kerala with an MA in economics and a bachelor’s degree in education, he has proven himself as an integral part of JT’s proofreading department, the paper’s last and sturdiest line of defence.

Rajan sees every day on the job as a Tawjihi test, saying that he fails the exam if an error slips by him and is published the next day. 

“He is a true perfectionist. He used to stay awake all night after the newspaper went to print and then would buy the new issue to make sure there were no mistakes. When he did, he would sleep for a few hours before starting a new working day,” recalls Managing Editor Mahmoud Al Abed.

By 1988, after the couple had their first two children, Rajive and Annie, Alice returned to India to take care of them and Rajan stayed on, going home once a year on his annual leave.

The couple has a third child, Rahul, who was born in India in 1991.

On countless occasions, Rajan would bring the JT staff a treat to remind them of a happy event — be it Christmas, Eid, Independence Day or even Diwali and sometimes just because he felt like it.

Looking back at his three decades in Jordan and with the JT, the veteran proofreader has nothing but good memories.

“My 34 years in Jordan were very good. The people in Jordan... [and] the people at The Jordan Times are very polite,” he says.

Home News Editor Ranjana Barua, who has worked with Rajan for 14 years, says she cannot imagine the JT without him. “In a way, Raj has become synonymous with The Jordan Times.”

Agreeing with his colleagues, Raied Shuqum, lifestyle and sports editor says he will miss Raj’s smile and delightful demeanour. “He has a gentle soul and clean heart, which is rarely found these days. He has left a void that can never be filled again.”

Fifteen years ago, when he celebrated 20 years at the JT, Rajan said he wanted to bring his eldest son, Rajive, to Jordan to become a proofreader like him.

Today, Rajive is the world and Middle East editor.

Rajan’s easy-going attitude and his paternal aura have won him the respect and admiration of all JT staff members.

“Since I came to the newspaper, Rajan has been a mentor to me… He possesses a rare combination of vision, fairness and understanding. He has taken the proofreading section to the leading edge. Even more importantly though are the friendships he has developed. Every one trusts and loves him,” says proofreader Amjad Azzeh.

Though Rajan’s journey with The Jordan Times has come to a close, he has left an indelible mark on the newspaper that will endure.

Senior Reporter Khetam Malkawi thinks of him as “our Godfather”.

“We will miss seeing [Rajan] around, though we will never forget him,” she says.

Speaking at a farewell party held for Rajan, Chief Editor Samir Barhoum commended his exemplary years of service at the paper.

“You were the best ambassador of India in Jordan all the time and you will be the best ambassador of Jordan at home. You will be remembered by all of us... Thank you Rajan, from my heart.”

Researchers find bubonic plague fragments on NY subway

By - Feb 07,2015 - Last updated at Feb 07,2015

NEW YORK — It is universally acknowledged that the New York subway is grubby. What may come as a shock is that it contains DNA fragments linked to anthrax and bubonic plague.

Researchers from Cornell University have provided the first map of the subway’s microbes, identifying more than 1,688 types of bacteria and one station that even supports a “marine ecosystem”.

They say the vast majority of the bacteria is harmless to the 1.7 billion people who travel each year on 960 kilometres of track in passenger service in America’s largest city.

But disease-causing bacteria that are resistant to drugs were found in 27 per cent of samples.

Two were found with DNA fragments of anthrax and three with a plasmid associated with bubonic plague, albeit at very low levels.

Yet there has not been a single reported case of the plague in New York since the PathoMap project began in June 2013.

The study’s senior investigator, Christopher Mason, says the research shows the resilience of the human body and that the bacteria is not enough to pose a threat to our health.

“The presence of these microbes and the lack of reported medical cases is truly a testament to our body’s immune system, and our innate ability to continuously adapt to our environment,” he said.

Perhaps most striking is that 48 per cent of the samples matched no known organism, which the study said highlighted “the vast wealth of unknown species that are ubiquitous in urban areas”.

In October 2012, Hurricane Sandy caused havoc across the city and submerged South Ferry Station in Lower Manhattan in ocean water.

Two years later, the majority of bacteria at the station are “more commonly associated with fish species, marine environments or very cold Antarctic environments”, the study found.

It also found that Penn Station, one of New York’s busiest transit hubs, has a vast bacterial ecology that shifts by the hour.

New York has the seventh largest subway in the world in terms of annual ridership, behind Tokyo, Beijing, Moscow and other cities in the Far East, but ahead of Mexico City, Hong Kong and Paris.

Human DNA was only the fourth most abundant species, behind two insects, the Mediterranean fruit fly and the mountain pine beetle.

The researchers say they collected 1,457 DNA samples from all 466 open stations on all 24 lines.

New law to require workaholic Japanese to take days off

By - Feb 07,2015 - Last updated at Feb 07,2015

TOKYO — College-educated and gainfully employed 36-year-old Eriko Sekiguchi should be a sought-after friend or date, planning nights on the town and faraway resort vacations. But she works in Japan, a nation where workaholic habits die hard.

Often toiling 14 hours a day for a major trading company, including early morning meetings and after-hours “settai”, or networking with clients, she used just eight of her 20 paid vacation days last year. Six of those days were for being sick.

“Nobody else uses their vacation days,” said Sekiguchi, who was so busy that her interview with The Associated Press had to be rescheduled several times before she could pop out of the office.

The government wants to change all that.

Legislation that will be submitted during the parliamentary session that began January 26 aims to ensure workers get the rest they need. In a break with past practice, it will become the legal responsibility of employers to ensure workers take their holidays.

Japan has been studying such legislation for years. There has been more impetus for change since 2012 as a consensus developed that the health, social and productivity costs of Japan’s extreme work ethic were too high.

Part of the problem has been that many people fear resentment from co-workers if they take days off, a real concern in a conformist culture that values harmony.

After all, in Japan, only wimps use up all their vacation days.

Most of the affected workers are “salarymen” or “OL” for office ladies like Sekiguchi, so dedicated to their jobs they can’t seem to go home. They are the stereotypes of, and the power behind, Japan Inc.

That has come with its social costs. Sekiguchi worries she will never get married or even find a boyfriend, unless he happens to be in the office. She wishes companies would simply shut down now and then to allow workers to take days off without qualms.

The workaholic lifestyle and related reluctance of couples to raise children have long been blamed as a factor behind the nose-diving birth rate that’s undermining the world’s third-biggest economy.

Working literally to death is a tragedy so common that a term has been coined for it: “karoshi”. The government estimates there are 200 karoshi deaths a year from causes such as heart attacks or cerebral haemorrhaging after working long hours. It’s aware of many cases of mental depression and suicides from overwork not counted as karoshi.

About 22 per cent of Japanese work more than 49 hours a week, compared with 16 per cent of Americans, 11 per cent of the French and Germans, according to data compiled by the Japanese government. South Koreans seem even more workaholic, at 35 per cent.

Barely half the vacation days allotted to Japanese workers are ever taken, an average of nine days per individual a year.

The problem in Japan in some ways parallels the situation of American workers, many of whom don’t get guaranteed paid vacations at all. But those who get them usually do take all or most of them.

Japanese must use their vacations for sick days, although a separate law guarantees two-thirds of their wages if they get seriously ill and take extended days off.

That means workers save two or three vacation days for fear of catching a cold or some other minor illness so they can stay home, said Yuu Wakebe, the health and labour ministry official overseeing such standards.

Wakebe himself routinely does 100 hours of overtime a month, and took only five days off last year, one of them for staying home with a cold. He managed to take a vacation to Hawaii with his family.

“It is actually a worker’s right to take paid vacations,” he said. “But working in Japan involves quite a lot of a volunteer spirit.”

Younger workers feel uncomfortable going home before their bosses do. Working overtime for free, called “sah-bee-soo zahn-gyo”, or “service overtime”, is prevalent.

Job descriptions also tend to be vague, especially in white-collar occupations, meaning a person not coming in translates to more work for others in his or her team.

The new law will allow for more flexible work hours, encouraging parents to spend more time with their children during summer months, for instance, when school is closed.

Although Japan is notorious for hard work, it’s equally known for inefficiency and bureaucracy. Workers sit around in the name of team spirit, despite questionable performance and productivity.

Experts say the law is a start, while acknowledging the roots of the dilemma lie deep.

When night falls in Tokyo, groups of dark-suited salarymen can be seen, drinking at drab lantern-bobbing pubs under the train tracks, unwinding before heading home. They laugh, guzzle down their beers and pick at charcoal-broiled fish.

Ask any of them: they haven’t taken many days off. One said the 12 days he took off last year were too many.

Japan’s work ethic, Prime Minister Shinzo Abe said, is “a culture that falsely beatifies long hours”.

Augmented reality

By - Feb 05,2015 - Last updated at Feb 05,2015

Doesn’t the name sound good? Even before knowing what it actually represents you are inevitably drawn and want to find out more about it. Anything that promises more than “just” reality must be good.

Augmented Reality (AR) comes new in a long series of high-tech imaging techniques that never cease to amaze us. From simple graphics, to 3D, animation, then 3D animation and VR (Virtual Reality), and last but not least CGI (Computer Generated Imagery), AR brings a big, a huge plus to the world of digital imaging.

An example will illustrate it best. Take out your smartphone, point it to a simple still image of say the English archaeological site of Stonehenge (we call it the target picture) and watch your phone’s screen turn into a movie showing you the site in all its splendour, with a text and sound detailed explanation about its history. It will immerse you in the world of Stonehenge.

Another example. Point your smartphone to a still picture of a human’s heart and watch a 3D animation about arteries transplant surgery with incredible details and realism.

In a way AR is a combination of VR and CGI.

Instead of using a still image as a target picture you can just point the smartphone (or a tablet, or any digital device able to perform the trick, for that matter) to the real thing, i.e. Stonehenge for instance, if you happen to be there. The AR application will not only recognise the landmark but also its GPS position, therefore perfectly identifying it and then displaying the pertaining video, 3D animation or any other information about it.

In architecture, and arts in general, AR offers an invaluable tool for understanding structures and working on them. Another example, this time in the world cosmetics and beauty, and that, arguably, would attract women more particularly. Choose the proper AR application, select a manufacturer like Revlon, L’Oréal or Shiseido to name a few, point your smartphone to your face (think selfie!) and see yourself in various kinds and doses of foundation, lipstick, eye shadow, mascara and so forth, as if you had bought the products and tried them on, without really having to.

Merchants’ catalogues of products can greatly benefit from AR. By pointing a smartphone or tablet to the target picture of a given product one can explore it in glorious 3D motion, learning everything about it before buying it thanks to the “augmented” (hence the name) information.

Because the information, the 3D photos or animation, the videos that AR usually provides come in high definition and are made in digital from the ground up, quality is outstanding and constitutes an exhilarating experience for the viewer.

Though it really picked up in a noticeable manner around 2010 and is making waves now, AR actually started circa 1990 in the USA with professor Caudell who initially developed software to monitor the cabling construction in aircrafts for Boeing. This saved the company the trouble of coming up with traditional user manuals that, compared to AR would be expensive, slow and time consuming, hard and long to update, etc.

The future of AR is bright and beyond discussion. It falls in the same category as cloud usage — there’s no going back. Most AR application runs under the two main OS for mobile computing, Google’s Android and Apple’s iOS.

As for the field of education, AR is not just helping but is expecting to change education in a radical manner somewhere between 2020 and 2025. When children can point a mobile device to say a driving wheel and then start learning all about driving and traffic rules and regulations with attractive information, well presented, in high definition, nothing can be more motivating or stimulating. But AR is a visual experience and no text-based explanation can give a true feel of what it is or how it works!

Soon AR will be as common as sending a selfie to your friend via Whatsapp. Soon there will be a law stipulating “no AR while driving”!

Light jogging is best for a long life

By - Feb 05,2015 - Last updated at Feb 05,2015

MIAMI — Vigorous exercise such as fast running might be harmful to your health over time, according to a Danish study Monday that found light jogging is best for longevity.

People who did not jog at all were just as likely to die as people who jogged strenuously and often, according to the 12-year study in the Journal of the American College of Cardiology.

But those who jogged lightly, between 1 and 2.4 hours per week, were the least likely to die suddenly, said the findings based on 1,098 healthy joggers and 413 healthy but sedentary non-joggers in the Copenhagen City Heart Study.

Researchers had access to records that tracked hours of jogging, frequency and the individual’s perception of pace.

The optimal frequency of jogging was no more than three times per week, and slow to moderate joggers experienced significantly lower mortality rates than fast-paced runners.

“It is important to emphasise that the pace of the slow joggers corresponds to vigorous exercise and strenuous jogging corresponds to very vigorous exercise,” said Peter Schnohr, a researcher from the Copenhagen City Heart Study, Frederiksberg Hospital in Copenhagen, Denmark.

“When performed for decades, this activity level could pose health risks, especially to the cardiovascular system.”

Past research has found similar correlations between light to moderate exercise and long life, as well as the higher death risk associated with vigorous exercise.

“If your goal is to decrease risk of death and improve life expectancy, jogging a few times a week at a moderate pace is a good strategy,” Schnohr said.

“Anything more is not just unnecessary, it may be harmful.”

China’s mountain hermits seek a highway to heaven

By - Feb 05,2015 - Last updated at Feb 05,2015

ZHONGNAN MOUNTAINS, China — His unheated hut is half way up a mountain with no electricity, and his diet consists mostly of cabbage. But Master Hou says he has found a recipe for joy. 

“There is no happier way for a person to live on this earth,” he declared, balancing on a hard wooden stool outside his primitive mud brick dwelling.

Hundreds of millions have moved to China’s urban areas during a decades-long economic boom, but some are turning their backs on the bright lights and big cities to live as isolated hermits.

Their choice puts them in touch with an ancient tradition undergoing a surprising modern-day revival.

Hundreds of small huts dot the jagged peaks of the remote Zhongnan mountains in central China, where followers of Buddhism and local Taoist traditions have for centuries sought to live far from the madding crowds.

“The Zhongnan mountains have a special aura,” said Hou, who moved to the hills almost a decade ago and wrapped himself in a long black robe, smiling as the wind rustled the surrounding woods.

Hou grew up in the bustling coastal city of Zhuhai, next to the gambling Mecca of Macau, but now his days consist almost entirely of meditation, with pauses to chop firewood and vegetables.

“Cities are places of restless life. Here is where you can find inner joy,” he said. “Now I’m happy to be alone.”

Winter temperatures can drop below minus 20oC and deadly snakes lurk under rocks, but the mountaintops are growing increasingly crowded amid rising dissatisfaction with materialism.

Hou — who looks in his 40s but says Taoists do not reveal their age — was recently joined by two apprentices.

Wang Gaofeng, 26, has a wispier beard than his master, and said he had quit a management-level job in China’s vast railway system a year ago.

“Watching TV and playing video games are just temporary excitement, like opium. That kind of pleasure is quickly gone,” he said, chomping on some freshly boiled cabbage.

 

Poisonous mushrooms

 

It is a radically individualistic contrast to the collectivist mantras of past decades.

But today’s hermits are following a well-beaten historical path, and experts say quiet types have preferred to live alone in the mountains of China for more than 3,000 years.

Taoism — loosely based on the writings of a mythical figure named Laozi who lived some 2,500 years ago — calls for an adherence to “the way”, which practitioners have long interpreted as a return to the natural world.

Unlike their Western equivalents, religiously inspired outsiders who often shunned society completely, China’s mountain dwellers have historically been sought out by politicians.

“Hermits played a political role, they pushed society forward and maintained ancient ideas,” said Zhang Jianfeng, part-time mountain dweller and founder of a Taoism magazine.

But the officially atheist Communist Party came to power in 1949, cutting the hermits’ political connections.

Anti-religious campaigns reached fever pitch during the decade of upheaval beginning in 1966 known as the Cultural Revolution, when many of the temples and shrines in the Zhongnan mountains were destroyed and their denizens dispersed.

Nonetheless experts estimate several hundred hermits survived the period unscathed deep in the hills, with some even said to be unaware the Communists had taken power.

Their numbers have risen since the government relaxed religious controls in the 1980s.

“Twenty years ago, there were just a few hundred people living in the Zhongnan mountains. But in the last few years, the number has increased very quickly,” said Zhang.

“Now perhaps there are too many people blindly moving to the mountains,” he added.

“There are incidents every year, people eating poisonous mushrooms, or freezing to death... some people lack common sense.”

Much of the hermit revival can be attributed to American writer Bill Porter, who in 1993 published the first book about the mountain dwellers.

It was a commercial failure in the US, leaving Porter living on government food stamps. But its 2006 Chinese translation became a hit, selling more than 100,000 copies.

“In the 1980s no one paid the hermits any attention, because everyone had a chance to make a buck and improve their lives materially,” said the shaggy-bearded author. “People thought it absurd to go in the opposite direction.”

Now he notes more well-educated former professionals among the denizens of what he calls “hermit heaven”, and one who did not want to be named told AFP he was a government official on sabbatical.

“You get a much wider mix, people who are jaded or disillusioned in the current economy and are seeking something more,” said Porter.

 

‘Inner peace’

 

China’s decades of breakneck economic growth have created a substantial middle class, but a few of them now openly question materialist values.

Around a dozen young people from across China live in a clump of wooden huts which acts as a testing ground for aspiring hermits, albeit outfitted with electricity and a DVD player.

Liu Jingchong, 38, moved in after quitting a lucrative job in the southern city of Guangzhou this year, and plans to live completely alone.

“I felt life was an endless circle: finding a better car, better job, a better girlfriend, but not going anywhere,” he said, sitting cross-legged on a cushion.

“When I’m alone on the mountain, I will just need shelter, a pot, and seeds from the pine trees.”

More than half the hermits in the range are said to be women, and Li Yunqi, 26, spent several weeks at the cottages.

“I like the life of a hermit, living on a mountain. I came here for inner peace and to escape the noise of the city,” she said, wearing a puffy pink coat and fiddling with a smartphone as an off-road vehicle carried her down a muddy path to civilisation.

The flu shot

By - Feb 04,2015 - Last updated at Feb 04,2015

Like any other self-respecting woman, I am not too overtly fond of vaccinations. There is something about the medical syringe that transports me back to my childhood. 

In the remote small coal town where I was raised, every few months my father would summon a compounder to the house. His job was to inoculate us against any new germs that might invade our young bodies. Now, this gentleman would arrive with a heavy leather bag strapped to his shoulder. From which he would unpack the tiny bottles, packets and wads of cotton wool that he needed for the procedure. 

Our cook would be summoned and he would be asked to boil some water in a saucepan, into this would go the syringe and needle, for extra disinfection. It was precisely at this stage that I would start hyperventilating. 

The compounder would pull out the boiled syringe, fit the needle into it and wave it in the air, to sort of, make it dry. I would be hypnotised by the swing like swaying movement of his hand and watch in horrific fascination. He would then uncap the medicine pot, piercing the rubber cap with the pointy needle and draw the liquid into it. A little bit of the medicine would be squirted out to release any trapped air bubbles and then he would turn towards us with firm determination. 

My brothers and I were asked to offer up our arms for the routine jab. I would run away and hide in the most distant corner of the house and pretend to be invisible. Invisible people are also supposed to be deaf I told my mother once when she kept calling out my name and I did not answer from behind the curtain, in front of which she was standing. She of course did not get the joke and discovered my hiding place in a jiffy and marched me to the patio where the man with the needle was ready with the vaccine. 

My brothers would make funny faces to distract me. I was told they did that but I never got to see it because my own eyes would be tear ridden and tightly shut. After the jab we were supposed to rotate our arm clockwise and anticlockwise, which we did obediently. And then a small ball of wool would be placed on the spot, which was held in place by a sticky tape. The only good thing in this entire painful exercise was that we actually did not fall sick with the disease we were immunised against. 

All this came back to me when I went for my flu shot last month. I did not want one but was persuaded to get preventative treatment before I left for a holiday to my home country India. The process did not take more than half a minute; the needles being finer now with each one individually sterilised and packed. 

The first 10 days of my visit was fine. Everybody snivelled and coughed around me but I was beaming with good health. It was on the 11th day that I woke up with a giant sneeze and by the evening was running a high fever. 

“I took the flu vaccine,” I informed my husband. 

“Yes,” he agreed. 

“Why am I sick?” I asked him. 

“This is the Indian flu,” he coughed. 

“How to overcome it?” I sniffed. 

“Let’s call your compounder,” he suggested. 

“I’m invisible now,” I declared solemnly. 

‘Sharing economy’ reshapes markets as complaints rise

By - Feb 04,2015 - Last updated at Feb 04,2015

WASHINGTON — Want to make a bit of extra cash driving strangers around in your car, taking care of someone’s dog, renting your apartment or cooking a meal?

Welcome to the sharing economy.

With Internet-based apps and services like Uber, Airbnb and others, you make money, and the consumer saves. So it’s a win-win? That’s the multibillion-dollar question.

The new way of operating has been reshaping entire economic sectors, with the promise of improved efficiency and more flexibility.

The spectacular rise of ride-sharing, home-sharing and other services turned these economic models upside down, and has fuelled complaints that these services effectively skirt rules on safety, consumer protection and labour rights.

Some economists say this “peer-to-peer” model offers numerous advantages by tapping underutilised resources.

The sharing economy “can improve consumer welfare by offering new innovations, more choices, more service differentiation, better prices and higher quality services,” says a study by George Mason University economists.

Researcher Christopher Koopman, an author of the George Mason report, said the sharing economy “allows people to take idle capital and turn them into revenue sources”.

“People are taking spare bedroom, cars, tools they are not using and becoming their own entrepreneurs”.

There is no official definition of the sharing economy. Some include online delivery services like Instacart and Postmates; neighbour-sharing platforms like Peerby; pet-sitting service DogVacay; and the restroom service Airpnp.

The research firm PwC estimates that five sharing economy segments — finance, online staffing, accommodation, car sharing and music or video streaming — could be worth $335 billion by 2025, up from just $15 billion today.

“The sharing economy will be part of the overall economy going forward,” said technology strategist Mary Jesse in a blog post.

“Some industries — like taxi services in transportation and B&B rentals in travel — will be completely transformed, while others, such as financial services, will be only peripherally impacted. This is part of the ‘technology revolution,’ as well as a new norm.”

Arun Sundararajan, a New York University economist who studies the sharing economy, told a January congressional hearing that “this transition will have a positive impact on economic growth and welfare, by stimulating new consumption, by raising productivity, and by catalysing individual innovation and entrepreneurship”.

 

Innovation or 

rule-bending?

 

Uber is the best known platform in the sharing economy, having reached a valuation of $40 billion while expanding to more than 200 cities in 54 countries.

But Uber and similar services like Lyft and Sidecar have fuelled heated protests from taxi drivers, who complain that the new entrants don’t have to meet the same requirements for licensing, safety and insurance, making the competition unfair.

Airbnb, the leading online platform for peer-to-peer lodging, has sparked similar complaints from the hotel sector. Responding to complaints, the San Francisco start-up recently expanded efforts to collect lodging taxes in some locations.

Other services in the sharing economy include “Feastly”, which allows individuals to cook meals for customers; Vinted, a marketplace for unwanted clothing; and Lending Club, one of several platforms for peer-to-peer loans.

Dean Baker, an economist with the left-leaning Centre for Economic and Policy Research in Washington, said these players can thrive largely because they don’t play by the same rules as incumbents.

“It doesn’t make sense to have a regulated sector and another one where the rules don’t apply,” Baker told AFP.

“What you want to do is separate out where they deliver innovation or create a real benefit.”

Baker said ride-sharing services have raised particular concerns because drivers are competing against taxis, which are limited by most cities under a licensing scheme such as the “medallions” in San Francisco which can sell for $250,000 or so.

“There is an issue of fairness,” Baker said. “If the cities want to let anyone drive, they should buy back the medallions.”

 

Jobs or not?

 

From the labour perspective, the new digital platforms are touted as ways to encourage more people to become entrepreneurs.

A study commissioned by Uber and led by Princeton University economist Alan Kreuger which surveyed US drivers for Uber found they earned above-average wages and were generally satisfied with the arrangement.

The study found Uber driver earned around $6 per hour more than traditional taxi drivers, but noted that comparison is difficult because Uber drivers must pay certain expenses.

Baker says this arrangement “is great for people to have an option to work in their spare time and make extra money”, but that it still lacks the benefits of full-time employment.

“What happens when someone has an accident? Do they have workers comp [insurance]?,” he said.

Baker said imposing regulations and costs on sharing economy firms could hurt their profitability but would level the playing field.

“These companies are going to have a choice where they have to get serious about accepting reasonable regulation or they will be chased out of business,” he said.

Koopman argues however that “a lot of these regulations that have been on the books for decades are no longer serving consumer needs and are just protecting industries from competition”.

He maintains that as these activities grow, “there will be a new generation of people who are looking to the sharing economy both from the consumer and the producer side. And governments are ultimately going to have to respond”.

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